An Absolute Mess - Mitarbeiter (anonym) bei LSI Solutions: Mitarbeiterbewertung

1,0
25. März 2022
Mitarbeiter (anonym)
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CEO-Befürwortung
Geschäftsprognose

Pros

- Good benefits; healthcare option is one of the best I've had - Some great products that are helping patients to undergo less invasive and dangerous surgeries - If you can handle this place, your next job will seem like a piece of cake

Kontras

The culture here is toxic. The owner of the company is god, and what he says, goes. It is well-known that he screams at employees and his directors, but this is treated as just something that happens, rather than a serious problem. This led to a disastrous COVID response, where the whole company was dragged back onsite as soon as NY state law allowed, because the owner hates WFH. He even sent an e-mail telling all of us to be grateful we kept our jobs and that if we weren't comfortable coming back, we were welcome to leave. If you wanted to WFH, you had to sign this ridiculous paperwork with HR saying why. In the middle of a pandemic. People have been leaving in droves since that e-mail and lay-offs in July 2020. The rate of hiring began to slide in mid 2021; with minimal WFH, it is difficult to attract decent people. WFH has been offered to some people, but they have to be hush-hush about it to avoid offending people who can't WFH (?). The regulatory department nearly completely turned over because of the lack of WFH. Ultimately, even if you want to do the right thing, if the doctor doesn't want to do it, it isn't happening. Important changes can take months because the directors and VPs have to waste time gently introducing it to the doctor and getting him to accept it. And he might just change his mind and snatch it away at the last moment. Toxic people flourish in a toxic culture, and this place is no exception. Top management is chosen based on their ability to "handle" the owner rather than their capabilities, so you might just end up with someone who has no idea what they are doing, but doesn't trust you to do it. You might be micromanaged or completely abandoned. I'm not aware of a good medium. And there are plenty of people who get away with refusing to do needed work as a result, and so you might find yourself facing brick walls with no way forward. Vacation time is a joke too. Don't believe anyone saying it is great; they are pretending that the required NY vacation time (where they removed a few holidays and some PTO) counts. You are required to use two weeks of your PTO during the two company shutdowns a year, which could be up to ten days that are gone. If you don't use them, you don't get paid during those weeks. And you have to jump through an insane amount of hoops to be allowed to work during that period unless you're considered essential. When I had a family medical emergency pre-NY-vacation-time, I ended up with not enough vacation time to take Thanksgiving and Christmas off besides what they gave us. And that was before they added the second shutdown! Top management doesn't communicate effectively, and so gossip and rumors are rampant. Those July 2020 layoffs? They first went through the grapevine, were denied, and then happened anyway.

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1,0
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Pros

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Kontras

Having spent several years here in engineering, I feel like I've gained a solid, realistic perspective on how the company actually operates, which is why I want to share this feedback. When I first started, the environment was great. It was defined by strong teamwork, genuine excitement about building new things, and a real willingness to teach each other. Over time, though, it feels like we've really lost that culture. Once you've been here long enough to see past the initial honeymoon phase, a few troubling trends become really obvious: 1. Extreme management politics: Too often, it feels like leadership sets up departments to compete instead of collaborate. It's incredibly frustrating to get caught in the middle of political turf wars between managers when you're just trying to focus on your work and complete a project. 2. Blame instead of root-cause problem solving: As engineers, we are trained to look at the root cause of a failure to fix the system. Unfortunately, the culture here prioritizes finding a scapegoat over finding a solution. This has created an environment where people are genuinely afraid to flag technical issues or speak up about risks because they're worried about retaliation. 3. Deep departmental divides: There is a real issue here with cliques. Instead of working as one team to build a great product, departments treat each other like rivals.
You see it every day-Quality and Production don't get along, and Engineering and Planning are constantly at odds, which makes things very inefficient.

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