RES reviews

3.4

57% would recommend to a friend

(339 total reviews)

Eduardo Medina

84% approve of CEO

37% positive business outlook

RES has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 339 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The RES employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Energy, Mining & Utilities industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

339 reviews
2.0
Apr 3, 2019

Poor Management

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The company has an Everyone Goes Home Safe Every Day work ethic and this is awesome. They also assist in providing power on projects in other companies that can't afford to or don't know how to provide it themselves.

Cons

The leadership is horrible. There is no accountability where it's most needed. When faced with issues, they are allowed to compound until they've gone too far and business is affected.

1.0
Nov 27, 2018

Layoffs, transfers, resignations - non stop

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You will learn things, meet smart people, you will be bought with good perks company has (health insurance, 401K, disability, life, work from home policy, flexible hours), you will be entertained one way or another. Just don't have an illusion that the company will value you or your hard work, or how long you had been with the company and your successes in making them money. When its time for ruling to come, whether it is from Americas or UK, to cut overheads or if someone stepped on a wrong toes - people are gone. They rather take your job away than forego a holiday party in the expensive hotel, outing in a ski resort or another executive offsite event. Ok interim place if nothing else comes along until a permanent solution is in place.

Cons

This company, that once was the ONE to work for, in my opinion, became increasingly hypocritical in the last 2.5 years due to a management change. That goes for a group in US as much as for entire global operations. New executives seem to join molded already as the breed that doesn't value their workforce and embrace constant turnover as the way of life. Executives that left in place are crippled with hypocrisy and fear. For all of you in a beginning of your career, should you decide to join, be aware that you are replaceable effective immediately and don't count on a mentorship - your manager most likely be someone not qualified to manage people or work they put in charge of. If you are lucky you will work on something meaningful; though there is a 50/50 chance to stuck in potentially useless project design to please the CEO (Ivor Gatto). For a seasonal professional - make sure to do a due diligence on your specific department and supervisors from an outside source. Some people are great and do care about others (those are extremely overworked, so be prepared), but there less and less of us left and we are overruled on how the business should be run to be healthy, sustainable and include happy employees. And all - watch your back - company culture changed to embrace scapegoating. There had been many cuts over last couple of years. It doesn't come only in a form of layoffs or interdepartmental transfers, there are many resignations across the globe and we learned to recognize sudden retirement as a warning sign of the same nature.

1.0
Jul 15, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Work from home options. Exposure to an innovative and exciting industry. Some serious experts in the technical teams. ILLUSION of opportunity, independence and flexibility.

Cons

Systemic discrimination by age and gender (and more) in pay, opportunities, and advancement/promotions. Pay is below market, with a few notable exceptions for white males. Wide pay gaps and no action to rectify, despite RES launching a ‘Gender Diversity’ program in 2018 after receiving pressure in the UK. Insufficient financial planning and spending to ensure business units will stay viable (regular layoff cycles in the US). Inappropriate decision making across the company, meaning lack of process and decisions are made at inappropriate levels in the company. Lack of organizational and management structure, which translates into a devastating lack of accountability. If you can get past all of the bigger organizational issues, the on-the-ground work isn’t much improved. Insufficient training and employee support. Serious transparency issues. No work/life balance - even though they offer a reasonable PTO package and WFH options, it does not guarantee you'll be able to use them. Great for autonomy and experienced developers; however, higher ups will end up making late decisions that compromise the project (timeline, budget, key stakeholder relationships) and generate costly rework. Even if they didn’t inform you, you will be accountable to make the changes, whether there’s more time or money available or not. There is consistent employee turnover in all levels and departments and it negatively impacts the projects. Technical teams do not fall under the same management as the Dev teams, meaning there is constant chain of command issues and the project suffers for it. If you're at a satellite office, expect this to be a regular issue and for work to progress on your projects at the main office without your input or knowledge. RES relies on hiring good people who will do more than what they're paid. They rely on those who go above and beyond to cover gaps in hiring, leadership, projects, and overall organizational shortcomings. They bleed those employees dry, (often on the carrot on a stick illusion of opportunity/advancement), while other employees are left unmonitored and unaccountable for their work. Ultimately, the promise of advancement doesn't mean much because decision making roles do not change and nearly all of these individuals are older white men from the UK. On-the-ground employees are the ones who pay the price when unsound decisions are made by these individuals. RES specifically makes decisions and policies that put employees in compromising positions without protection or leverage. Example 1: Development employees expected to build relationships and make project promises in the field, but higher ups will make late-in-the-game decisions that counter act that work without consulting the Dev team or considering the local damage. RES will be unaffected, but your reputation will be compromised and maybe your integrity too. Example 2: ask about their project bonus policy. Do not be surprised if you get the runaround, even though they may have used project bonus monies as expected income for you in hiring negotiations. Look at the loopholes (all policies) and know RES will leverage those to protect themselves – these policies are covertly made and are not made to protect your interests. RES has gone through periods of layoffs every couple of years, specifically timed in the year. Hypothetically, management could force the sale of assets/projects and then lay off the Dev team and not pay out thousands in project bonuses. Do not expect to receive a full severance package.

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RES Response
5y
Thank you for taking the time to share your individual experience at RES. Your feedback is important to help identify areas of opportunity to ensure a positive employee experience across RES. This is a challenging time for our industry, with companies having to evolve quickly to meet the pace of change. What does not change at RES is our firm belief that our talent is our best asset. We know success depends on all of us working together, in line with our values, to drive our business forward. Although you are no longer an active member of the RES team, your feedback continues to be important to this effort.
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