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Pratt & Whitney

Part of RTX

Engaged Employer

Pratt & Whitney reviews

3.7

71% would recommend to a friend

(2,255 total reviews)

Shane Eddy

60% approve of CEO

65% positive business outlook

Pratt & Whitney has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 2,255 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Pratt & Whitney employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Aerospace & Defense industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

2K reviews
4.0
Apr 5, 2016

Good career here if you can navigate the organization

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Working at PW can be a rewarding experience if you can navigate the organization. The salary can be outstanding. If you want to work at PW and maximize your experience here is a perspective to get there. PW is best for those with 5-10 years experience elsewhere. Also great for those with no experience to learn how the industry works. Learn and work hard first six months - hit the ground running. Everyone is watching you for this time and your reputation will be set quickly. Work as much as you can take now and you can work normal hours later. Establish your reputation. Have a talk with your supervisor on what it will take to get an EP rating. EPs get the highest increases and best visibility. Ask specifically from your supervisor what it takes to get the EP rating and write in your objective document. When it comes time to hand it out you have a good justification to fight for it. Only 1-2 EPs are given out per working group so establish this early. If you do not get it and hit your goals ask why and push for a higher raise anyway. Establish peer networks - during these first few months you must establish a network of people inside and outside your working group. Start with your internal group first. Find someone there who can show you around and guide you preferably someone with 5-10 years there. Use networking groups within PW to build a network outside your working group. Many people are fairly social at work so this won't be too hard - even in engineering. Having these networks help with familiarity of the organization. Set aside part of your paycheck for having lunch with anyone and everyone - the cafeteria works well. Get to know your HR manager well or someone in HR and be in their good graces - HR runs your career at PW not your supervisor necessarily. HR has all the inside information and can quickly accelerate your career by tipping you off to new and better jobs. They also recommend people first for jobs and usually are final gatekeepers on all jobs. They also influence and run leadership reviews - which means you can get fast tracked more quickly. I have personally seen people with years of experience and leadership skills get passed over for leadership for people who are friends with HR managers. Don't skip this step. Get an executive mentor(s) - after about 6 months find an executive mentor. This needs to be an executive. When 6 mos rolls around you should start looking for one and get one within 9 months. Some executives are more strict on mentoring than others but all of them will be willing to do it. First preference is someone within your organization chain. If you get a meeting with them be prepared - know what you want to do at PW (do not be shy) and ask how to get there. Executives know how to maneuver the politic and they can recommend you for better jobs and better salaries. It is OK to have more than one. Switch jobs every 2 years - to grow here you have to constantly switch jobs. Learn and grow in first year of your job, make a difference in role at 18 mos plus start looking for new job, 24 mos have new job. Your salary and your reputation will not grow without it. Do not fall for lines on staying in a job - many have listened to this advice and are now eternally stuck there with 0-3% raises. The high profile jobs that can help you succeed more quickly at PW - jobs directly supporting the sales organization (executive interaction constantly), Customer Service, fleet management, FP&A, systems engineering, program management, legal, supply chain, operations. Wrapping up PW can be a great place to work if you know how to approach it. PW wants aggressive talent that is smart, socially savvy and bold. You can not be introverted or shy to be successful there. There are many smart talented people there but the bold and socially savvy people succeed while the other smart talented people get poorly compensated and become unhappy. Be happy and get paid well.

Cons

If you can not navigate the organization then PW can be a nightmare and a quagmire You must be smart, socially savvy, and bold (pro and con): First rule at PW is to be smart and pull your weight in your job. Next rule is to be socially savvy. Third is to be bold and aggressive. Management does not like the introverted, the indecisive, the poor communicators or those who do not deliver results regardless of excuse. If they see you that way you will be stuck at your position forever. You must be aggressive and communicate well to succeed there and be identified for management. PW is survival of the fittest at the management levels. You have to fight your way to the top. Communication by powerpoint is key. You must network at all levels and jump at opportunities to work on projects and present to executives. You must go to parties and networking events. Executives give projects to people they like and know. You must go to Summer parties and holiday parties to network to get promoted and succeed. I highly suggest learning to play golf (a $500 investment with clubs) and playing in United Way tournaments and golf leagues - easy way to network and succeed. Know where you want to be in 5 years; if not there in 5 - leave. PW is known for having high potential. However if you are not on a fast track and are ambitious you need to get out. Staying beyond 5 years without a direction leads to getting stuck there and becoming unhappy. There are many other companies that will take your skill set you learned from PW and pay you 20-30% more. Don't get stuck with a 0-2% raise when you can make more. Besides - PW has a reputation of taking people back after a couple of years of leaving with a 20-30% bump and promotions. Engineering is the slowest route to promotion - engineering is notorious for not promoting people and having to wait in line 20-30 years to become a manager. Do yourself a favor if you are ambitious - don't stay there. Do your 4-5 years and go work somewhere else. If you are young or have little experience you are not valued greatly even if you are a superstar. Rotation programs such as FLP or LDP make you believe you are doing well and are fast-tracked. However there is a youth bias at PW. If you are under 30 or starting out of college you can be an EP your first few years and it means nothing. The people that get the manager jobs are over 30 and/or come from outside with 5-10 years experience or have good relationship with HR managers. You will not be managing 5 years out of college even with an MBA and other credentials. Compensation guidelines - there are usually rules that everyone get 0%-3% raises yearly. This is an easy way for HR and supervisors to get around the difficult discussions around salary they don't want to have. There are many people that get much higher (10+%) raises. You have to fight for it to get it (squeaky wheel idea). Awards are also not limited - you will hear certain awards are limited to 1-2 per year - HR says this to keep things fair. However if you can't get the big raise ask for multiple awards a year. There is no limit to these despite the general guidelines. Learn to say no - except to your boss and executives - to preserve work life balance - your boss somewhat and executives to a heavy degree set your upward mobility. To achieve work life balance say no as much as you can to tasks except to your boss and executives. Any direct work from executives comes first and is much more valuable to your career. Help your peers when you can but do not do their work for them - many get caught in that trap - make your peers work because they probably make more than you do. That is harsh to say but unless you want to work 80 hours a week with no benefit you have to do it.

2.0
Apr 16, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Employees are treated fairly well. 401K Plan is better than most companies. Gym, Starbucks, multiple cafeterias, etc. are available on site. Great place for people who want little responsibility behind a desk all day coasting to retirement.

Cons

Very difficult to finish even the simplest of tasks. The place is very disorganized. You spend the majority of your time waiting on answers from other people and trying to navigate through all of their countless broken systems. Not a whole lot of innovation going on and very little involvement with the end-product.

3.0
Apr 14, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Working on aircraft engines is fascinating and challenging You learn a lot about the product because you often do multiple roles They are really focused on the quality of the product and encourage employees to speak up about deficiencies or opportunities to improve products and processes. If you are hourly, the union ensures that you are compensated well. Opportunities to change organizations with some struggle, but still possible. Opportunities to work around the world Employee scholarship is competitive 401k portfolio options are competitive but you pay fees for using their management systems or if you want to opt out and manage it yourself.

Cons

There is a lot of nepotism at the head quarters If you don't find a mentor within the first few years, your ability to be promoted is limited Still has "the boys club" mentality but it is not openly admitted and is done subtly HR changes so frequently that you struggle to get issues resolved No formal manager requirements or training before someone is hired as a manager, so there are countless inept managers who do not value or even demean employees. People are promoted and pay is determined on likeability, not performance results or customer opinion. It is nearly impossible to be fired from the company, so there are deadweight employees in every organization as well as incompetent employees. Furlough days and layoffs have taken place from 2008-2011, and started again in 2015 but there hasn't been any paycuts for the Executive Board members. You can and will get guilted or bullied into working overtime; which is not compensated. If you have temporary OT compensation, you must work 45 hours before you can start getting paid straight time at hour 46 (you give them 5 free hours of work). No flex-time unless you work at Head Quarters, and even then it is limited to if your manager decides that it won't hurt their metrics. Other industries have 9/80 work weeks, despite your work location or job title. Health care coverage has moved to HMOs with HSAs. You pay more, they pay less. Still uses the outdated forced ranking systems for performance reviews. Results in no developmental improvement for employees, the forms aren't reviewed when promotions and pay raises are being considered, and pits employees and managers against each other. Every year a secret meeting is held for each organization and the managers argue about who deserves to be promoted, but this depends on your managers ability to sway votes in your favor and if they have seniority in the organization. For the most part, this type of performance based review only results in the popular (through networking, not actual results) getting promoted instead of the real leaders.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 2,255 Reviews

Glassdoor has 2,858 Pratt & Whitney reviews submitted anonymously by Pratt & Whitney employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Pratt & Whitney is right for you.