Apple reviews

4.2

80% would recommend to a friend

(43,056 total reviews)
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Tim Cook

86% approve of CEO

73% positive business outlook

Apple has an employee rating of 4.2 out of 5 stars, based on 43,056 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Apple employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Informatique industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

43K reviews
4.0
Oct 6, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

• Lots of accountability and responsibility given to the individual, with lots of trust from management. I was expecting the opposite before starting there, so that was a wonderful surprise. • Entry salaries are fair, but from the stories I've seen around myself, if you get results, you get rewarded very quickly, and by a lot. • Benefits more that fair, I heard it's one of the best, if not the best, in the Valley. • People. In my corner of things, there was very little politics, and everybody was here trying to simply do their best with each other. Really amazing work environment. • They don't hire fanboys in engineering, so you get a really nice variety of mindsets. • Diversity, while still at a disappointing Silicon-Valley-esque level, is much better than in other Silicon Valley companies, and you can feel that it's that way because they know that's how you get a really complementary workforce. The campus itself just "feels" great (even though a bit cramped in collective spaces like restaurants, but they're working on it!).

Cons

I minded: • No public stuff, no public speaking, no blogging, no open-source, no nothing (you're supposed to ask; and then you're told no). ;) I know many many people, probably among the strongest engineers I know, with a lot of open-source activity, who quit, refused an offer, or wouldn't even talk with Apple just for this reason. I do miss Apple, but I don't miss that bit, I enjoy every bit of public freedom now (as you can see!) • Every engineer must be in Sunnyvale or Cupertino. There's a strong anti-remote culture, the right to move away from the over-expensive Valley is only for veterans. They let you be very flexible with your time (you can take some days working remote, as long as it doesn't go against the current projects), but that doesn't solve the fact that you still have to live in an outrageously expensive corner of the US, and there's no other choice. On the other hand, it's kinda cool to say in the morning "oh, I wonder if that bit of the final product could change to accommodate what I'm doing", and to have lunch with the person in charge of it that same day (that happened to me a bunch of times). I didn't mind: • "Work hard" culture. I didn't mind, but some people could. Definitely hard to maintain work-life balance if you're not careful. • Sure, there was no politics and fanboy-ness in my part of the company, but I hear it can be very different elsewhere in Apple, notably outside of engineering. • Engineering knowledge transmission is badly broken. Nothing is documented, and it's seen as a feature of innovation (I never bought it very much, but who am I to judge, so that's still fine with me). Problem is, in that case, you would expect a solid oral-explanation culture, but it's the opposite too, people expect you to figure things out with no oral explanation of anything. I've heard this numerous times from people everywhere in Apple, so this is not a local culture thing in my department; and as you would expect, a lot of time is wasted that way, either on trying to figure something out for days that could have been explained in 30 seconds, or achieving entire pieces of work that have already been done by other people before, but no one told you even if you asked. I eventually got around that by bugging people and asking them the same questions 10 times in 10 different ways; people were a little bit annoyed, but getting the knowledge made me far more efficient than other recent engineers in my department. • Not as "fun" as other Silicon Valley companies, where you find workplaces with crazy stuff, and every day is weird. Apple decides not to follow the "there's a slide in my office" trend by design, and I actually prefer it this way. But if you want a truly full-on Silicon Valley experience, Apple is much more "like other companies" in that regard.

1.0
Apr 15, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

OK discounts on products and winter holiday shutdown period adds to your vacation days.

Cons

This review is for IS&T (IT) department. 99% are Indian H1B visa contractors so practically there is no diversity. There is bad communication skills, heavy accent (very hard to understand email and verbal communication) and bad manners. Contractors tend to stick together so you have to watch your back. Vendors are not very technically savvy and mediocre and/or below-average developers/consultants. However, there are few exceptions. At times they speak Hindi (during meetings) so you might as well learn the language to fit in. Apple claims to hire the best of the best but it looks the opposite. Middle management does not have necessary skills to manage and in many occasions does not have proper training to manage people/projects. Terrible work environment and culture. Office space is very bad - crowded, noisy, bad air flow.

3.0
Aug 17, 2018

Apple Specialist

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The friends you make among your coworkers really is the biggest thing that keeps you around. I have some of the greatest friends on my team and the thought of leaving that behind makes me sad. Great health/dental benefits and tuition reimbursement. It sucks because I go to a private art school and Apple doesn’t recognize this as education so I can’t be reimbursed for tuition which is a joke. I’m spending just as much if not more money than public education students at a university.

Cons

Work-life balance is SO off balance. Apple claims to promote a healthy work-life balance and they don’t show anything for it. I hate the way requesting time off works because if other employees requested time off months in advance for the same day you try to get off the month you’re wanting it off, you’re screwed because the threshold of people who requested that day off is met. Every. Time. This makes you look bad as an employee because it forces you to call out just so you can get away from the work environment and give yourself a vacation you deserve. The work gets monotonous. Apple claims that they believe in giving feedback to better the work place but when you give it no behavior is ever changed. The managers aren’t terribly helpful and you are micromanaged. Apple is the first US company to make it to 1 trillion dollars and you sure don’t feel it as an employee. They don’t give you free access to Apple Music as an employee, they give you nothing but a water bottle for Christmas and make you attend meetings quarterly on Sundays which are a day of worship for many employees. The ability to move in the company is impossible and if you do want to move up in the company you have to butt kiss your managers because it’s all just a big popularity contest in terms of getting promoted to a better higher paying position. If these things changed then this would be an amazing place to work.

Viewing 199 - 201 of 43,056 Reviews

Glassdoor has 52,653 Apple reviews submitted anonymously by Apple employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Apple is right for you.