Texas Instruments reviews

3.8

70% would recommend to a friend

(5,729 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 5,729 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
3.0
Oct 27, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

* TI's greatest asset is its people. * Very large company, enabling a curious mind to dabble in a number of different areas over the course of a career. * Solid compensation and benefits * Finally getting serious about renovating the campus.

Cons

* Since it's the only major semiconductor company in North Texas, a lot of people stick around for decades. They are called lifers. This prevents young, ambitious talent from growing into leadership roles. Not all lifers are bad. A lot have great ideas and a wealth of knowledge. But, there are some lifers that are dead weight and need to be removed to make way for fresh ideas. * Politics and Bureaucracy. It's a big company, so it comes with the territory. But, the combination of the two tends to stifle innovative and creative ideas from ever taking root. * "Old Boy Network": some of the lifers mentioned above have escaped layoffs and have landed cushy roles via the network. They always seem to be one step ahead of strategic shifts and the fallout that ensues. Governing philosophy of these types is to hire capable people below them to do all the work, which frees them up to travel the globe on the company's dime. * Lack of Innovation and Entrepreneurial Thinking. Upper management is dominated by sales and marketing types. Primarily a formulaic, sales-driven approach to things, which is odd for a historically innovative technology company. Not enough engineering thought leaders in upper management, which leads to a lack of inspirational engineering leadership throughout the company.

5.0
Sep 24, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The top management are very business savvy. They are able to steer the company in any market conditions. The company is constantly evolving under the top management. The company has a very broad base of products. The diversity of the products help the business to be stable and to grow steadily.

Cons

Many product lines are highly profitable, but the underlying technology may not have the cutting edge appeal. The workload could be very high, compared to other large companies. Working overtime is very common in R&D.

3.0
Sep 8, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

A very good place to start out as an intern. The work life is very simple with all work completed during work hours. Also, work hours are very flexible. People there are friendly when talking to or asking questions. The work difficulty really depends on which group you are placed in, so it can vary from very difficult to incredibly easy. The management tries to get the interns and new hires to meet together during various "Intern and New Hires" events. Very relaxed dress code, varying from regular shirt and jeans to business suit. I learned and was exposed to a lot of subjects I never intended on studying in my career during my internship at TI.

Cons

A very work-intensive environment. Everybody always has something they need to be doing with deadlines, thus you can see the stress on their faces everyday. People don't bother to say hi to others and tend to dart their eyes awkwardly and ignore the person unless directly spoken to. Very hard to get information when that information is greatly needed to complete particular assignments, requiring multiple emails and many days wasted. It can get very lonely as an intern since you will be assigned to a group where usually everybody is at different points in their lives and hard to relate to (30+ age difference with families). The work assigned varies from week to week, sometimes just reading big documents all week, solving issues with faulty devices, serving as the typical intern guinea pig slave, or working on your "intern" project. It can get very boring at times since nothing will need to be done for you, but you still need to fulfill your 40 hours/week work requirements. The following may or may not be cons, but did give me somewhat of a negative impression: -Workers complaining about their current job and progression at the company -Software from the company not working and it is up to us to fix the group in charge of the software's problems -Lack of communication from the supervisor. Supervisor would only come to talk to see results on the assignments. -People there seem to have this need to educate others on certain topics that the listener might already know about (The need to assert intellectual dominance and feel superior to others). This can get really annoying after a while. -Workers start gossiping and loitering once their manager is not around -Workers work slowly and procrastinate their work until close to the deadline where they start overworking just to finish the assignment

Viewing 265 - 267 of 5,729 Reviews

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