Woodward reviews

3.7

59% would recommend to a friend

(709 total reviews)
avatar

Chip Blankenship

75% approve of CEO

71% positive business outlook

Woodward has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 709 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Woodward 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

709 reviews
3.0
Apr 7, 2014

Woodward could be a great company!

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Woodward has excellent benefits, a relatively secure niche in many of its product lines, opportunities for expansion, and the capability to be truly great.

Cons

Woodward is a mid-size company that believes it is enormous. Management is inconsistent, sanctimonious, and often abusive. Of course, this depends on the manager; however, I have found that once a manager develops a problem with an employee, there is no way to get back into his or her good graces. Also, a major rule of thumb is NEVER to go to HR with any type of conflict. HR NEVER backs the employee--only the manager, and comments or actions are often twisted by the manager to decrease an employee's credibility with HR, other managers, and other employees. Like most corporations, Woodward frowns upon employees' discussing management's or HR's comments or actions with each other. Punishment is swift and over-the-top.

1.0
Feb 14, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I've worked at Woodward for over three years. Benefits are decent, I guess, but benefits don't pay the bills. I work with some really amazing people in my department. Despite the "too many chiefs, not enough Indians" management style common here, we do get things done. My direct supervisor cares about us as individuals, and does what he can to help us get our job done. He trusts us to know our jobs and to do them effectively, doesn't micro-manage.

Cons

Hmm, where to start? Like most new employees, I was starry-eyed at first, but I was quickly returned to reality the more I learned about this place. In the last year there has been a lot of overturn in the management/supervisory staff. The majority of the ones that are left seem to view the average production worker with disdain, and they disregard and disrespect the years of experience they've gained. Overall, the morale among the membership is the lowest that most can remember. Upper management seems very out of touch (or just doesn't care) about the plight of the rest of us who build the products that enable them to keep their high-profile jobs & salary. Even though Woodward talks a lot about not wasting underutilized talent (read: let people move up from where they are & let them do what they're good at doing) in practice, it's just talk. One of my co-workers applied for a job in the office area where this person actually has a degree to do, and when they asked about the status of their application, were told "no internal applications are being reviewed at this time." Imagine the disappointment. Why post the job then? Basically, if you're in production, forget about moving out, even if you have a degree and are very qualified. I had seriously thought about making Woodward a career until I saw how impossible it is to move up, unless you happen to work in a corner office or have a leather chair. They have also raised the specter of outsourcing their assembly work. I've heard stories about how great of a place Woodward was to work at from some of the old-timers. It seems like Woodward is quickly becoming the Wal-Mart of employers here in Fort Collins. The shareholders are probably really happy, though. They're definitely not the employer they were a few years ago.

1.0
Mar 28, 2013

Huge wage disparity

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

If your in the executive branch, a great place to work

Cons

Workers at poverty level wages, kept on by illusion of good benefits...until you try to use them. Executives rake in millions, lavish meetings, outings. Quick to lay-off workers but never give up a dime in their own salaries. Don't drink the koolaid, we are not "all one Woodward". You'll be worked hard, paid little and kicked to the curb.

Viewing 73 - 75 of 709 Reviews

Glassdoor has 831 Woodward reviews submitted anonymously by Woodward employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Woodward is right for you.