Texas Instruments reviews

3.8

70% would recommend to a friend

(5,730 total reviews)
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Haviv Ilan

61% approve of CEO

56% positive business outlook

Texas Instruments has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 5,730 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Texas Instruments employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Manufacturing industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

6K reviews
4.0
Jan 6, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

TI can provide an individual with plenty of career development opportunities. One of the best practices of TI management is in their support of employees moving to different jobs and taking on new directions. In most companies I've worked with management frowned on any ambitious career movement and many times it was held against you if your plans were discovered. At TI, this is viewed as diversification of knoweldge and generally supported. The working environment is fairly autonomous for most all the professional positions within the company. If you feel you need to investigate a particular area such as a new software tool or spend some time studying a new aspect of the project you are working on then you just do it. Schedule management is significantly up to the individual, at least as long as you can keep it from slipping. Benefits are comparable to that of most large companies. For the last several years there has been a significant push for healthy living and work/life balance. I know that underlying this is some study espousing the economic upside of happy healthy employees on the medical benefits balance sheet and also with regards to productivity but I'm fine with that because TI is stepping up in this regard. Overall employee moral is fairly decent. There is of course the usual griping about all manner of stuff but overall, if you're the kind who likes to set their own day to day schedule, TI is probably your kind of workplace. I feel the senior leadership has done a pretty good job in managing responses to a changing market. Although TI has consistantly fell short of expectation this year, the delta is right at the margins. All this combined with the fear that Nokia is looking to multi source its inventory has hit hard on stocks but TI has shown it is flexible and can react quickly to recover from less than stellar years. All in all, I feel I am treated fairly and my opinion is respected. Most of the people in TI are dedicated and intelligent and if you take the time to network a bit you can find ample resources to support your goals.

Cons

TI is such an open company that it can be difficult to generate momentum for some ideas. You really have to be willing to be a politician as well if you really want an idea to flourish because you must convince enough people that it would be worth persuing. This can eat up quite a bit of time and if you're not careful, you can find yourself short of time for the work that is currently on your plate. You have to be vigilent in managing your time as well as your goals. Another problem is that there are too many sales people that have not really worked in a product team and had to completely see a product through to completion. They are always expecting something to take a couple of hours or a day at most but the reality is it is usually a couple of weeks at least and then they do not respect that you have to weave their project into an already crowed schedule. Too late though, they've already promised the customer and you're on the hook. Sales drives most upper management and if a sales team really wants something they can usually push their priority down your throat if they want to. I understand that the bottom line is revenue but sometimes I feel like quality is sacrificed too much and we end up with an upset client rather than one we should have been honest with initially and simply told them we don't have the time. I'm sure someone will post a comment telling me I'm nieve in this respect but this is my opinion, not theirs. I blame upper management for this to a certain extent because it seems that a majority of it has risen through the sales force rather than through engineering.

3.0
Jan 6, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

TI offers good flexibility for those raising families and I feel comfortable with most of the people I work with as decent and respectable individuals. The fact that this is a big company allows me some flexibility to work with those I enjoy and avoid those that cause me frustration.

Cons

A management team that doesn't want to hear any bad news and is in a constant cost cutting mode while being terribly wasteful in other areas. Too many technical decisions are made by management with very little input from the technical employees who are left to support poor decisions and broken tools. Bureaucracy prevents many things that need fixing from even being acknowledged as a problem.

4.0
Dec 14, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I don't know how this stacks up with other Semiconductor companies, but I think this workplace is best for individuals who like to explore and grow in their chosen technical areas, it appears to be highly encouraged. However pursuing some technical areas of interest might (I believe this applies to any employer) might require working past regular hours, because my plate is normally full with regular work tasks (I guess thats why its called work!). One of the upsides about work is Flextime, this means I can say take my kid to the dentist during regular work hours, and make up for the hours spent at the dentist at work later (maybe stay back at work to conclude my tasks etc). Also, it is possible to work remotely (via VPN) if the task I am working on does not require my physical presence in the office.

Cons

I have watched some really bright individuals who have spent much longer time in the company than myself, it seems to me that individuals who choose a purely technical path, dont seem to be "important", yes they are respected but the dont appear to be the bosses. Sometimes I wonder how their compensation stacks up with some individuals who get a job with the sole aim of becoming a boss, and little or no interest in technical areas, which I think is the core of what we do. Thats one of the reasons I am checking out this site. Also note that the employee perception of the company varies from group to group in the same City, and from city to city!

Viewing 337 - 339 of 5,730 Reviews

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