Microsoft Software Development Engineer In Test (SDET) reviews

3.8

98% would recommend to a friend

(685 total reviews)
avatar

Satya Nadella

90% approve of CEO

86% positive business outlook

Software Development Engineer In Test SDET employees have rated Microsoft with 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 685 company reviews on Glassdoor. This indicates that most Software Development Engineer In Test SDET professionals have a good working experience there. Microsoft is rated in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) by Software Development Engineer In Test SDET professionals compared to other employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

685 reviews
4.0
Aug 8, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Microsoft offers excellent pay for relatively inexperienced developers. Even as a junior developer I was given responsibility, but I always had a mentor to aid me when I didn't know what to do. I shared an office with another developer, but I can't think of any engineering positions that had cubicles or open floor spots. There are many training sessions occurring and career progression seemed like a very formalised system - it's easy to see what you need to do to advance. Self-evaluation and goal setting is encouraged by managers. These goals and evaluations are used when determining bonuses or career progression.

Cons

Some of the internal systems seemed a little archaic. Internally, open source software, libraries or tools were viewed as hostile or at least with suspicion. I needed legal approval to use jQuery. My development computer was slow, even if I had a pair of nice monitors. 1 GB of RAM was terrible! A few of the employees seemed somewhat uninterested in their work - it was definitely a day job for them. Benefits like leave are tied to how long one has been an employee. Setting up an environment was not documented well in my team, and it was common for existing employees to not be able to help with this.

4.0
Aug 6, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good work environment and great benefits. Work/life balance isn't bad at all although this is something you need to actively manage otherwise work does tend to take over your life.

Cons

Too many meetings. As I mentioned it's somewhat hard to get the work/life balance right at times.

5.0
Jul 30, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

1. Working with great, intelligent, happy people who can also socialize (this is a difficult trait to get from great engineers; most engineers these days are too introverted). 2. Benefits are fantastic. If you have a family, then Microsoft is the boom! As a single person, I still too benefited immensely by their StayFit program- Microsoft paid 80% of a $7,000 bill to get me slim and trim. 3. Most managers respect you and listen to you. 4. It is easy to find great, talented, and professionally experienced mentors. 5. Moving about the company...let me rephrase that...technical breath and deepth are strongly encouraged. If Microsoft went from writing software to being a library or a hospital, it's employees would get right to it and thrive. 6. Great, strong collaboration between all the engineering deciplines. 7. World-wide talent. Microsoft goes to great lengths to recruit arround the world and lobby directly with congress to have certain immigration/visa limitation overruled. 8. Excellent resources for professional developement. Books, e-books, databases, on-site and online classes. 9. There is a group/alias for anything you can imagine...singing, theatre, biking, knitting,,,you name it. It is easy to get connected. 10. MOST IMPORTANTLY, Microsoft is probably THE most open and accepting company in the WORLD for Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender employees and their spouses. I know exactly the reason this is, but I'm not going to "out " any of the Senior Managers in this review.

Cons

1. Well BillG is gone. I'm still waiting to see if the new sucessors at the high mass can be successful and drive the company foward. Google, here we come! 2. Testers and PMs are more often viewed as the dentist in the room full of doctors. Devs need to be more supportive and sympathetic to their testers. 3. In a company of over 65,000 employees, it is very easy to feel unimportant or lost. But as long as you do your best and get promoted in your organization every year then things will be great. 4. There seems to be a bias between certains teams when it comes to salary and promotion. For example, two new college hirers started the same month, at Windows Live and Office teams respectively. Each at the same initial level with the same salary. After 3 years, the one in Office may have a greater salary and employment level than the one in Windows Live. Well you may say, the "successful" one is more capable, but astonishingly it has more to do with opportunity within the group you're hired into. The grass always looks greener from one team to another. The company however is making great strides to nomalize the ranking and promotion criteria by setting certain career level competencies and career model that is in use throughout the company.

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