Blue Origin reviews

3.2

46% would recommend to a friend

(1,216 total reviews)

Dave Limp

34% approve of CEO

40% positive business outlook

Blue Origin has an employee rating of 3.2 out of 5 stars, based on 1,216 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Blue Origin employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Aerospaziale e difesa industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

1K reviews
3.0
Aug 10, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Early career engineers are given great responsibility. Even recent college grads get to make important design decisions, if they step up to the challenge. In my experience, low-to-mid-level management is generally promoted from within the lower ranks, and therefore is in-touch with the their people and the technical matters at hand. They set excellent an work-ethic standard to follow, and are technically competent and respected. They lead by example. You might compare them to NCO's in the Armed Forces: tough, gritty squad leaders you would follow to the ends of the earth. There is a strong emphasis on hardware development, with plenty of opportunities for engineers to follow their designs from inception to test to production. If you like doing a variety of engineering tasks, Blue scores big points in that department. The individual-contributor folks are generally a very fun group of people to work with. Obviously there will never be a perfect environment, but I find Blue does a great job filtering out the potential jerks during the vetting process. Those who make it though tend to be well-rounded, easy to get along with, and nearly always very respectably competent.

Cons

The biggest area where Blue could improve is in their compensation scheme. A survey of colleagues indicates that annual pay increases (sans promotions) average about 3.5%, which is less than the Seattle-area cost of living growth. So in real-wage terms, we actually take a pay cut every year. That is demoralizing, especially for those who put in very long hours on behalf of the company, and has resulted in a more than a few departures I can name. With new entrants such as Project Kuiper coming to town, Blue will struggle to retain their top talent. The second area of improvement deals with the culture of upper management. Unlike the low-mid management, the upper-level folks were generally hired from outside, and almost universally came from Big Aerospace (disproportionately Honeywell) or government. Unsurprisingly, their arrival has had a negative effect on morale and decision-making speed, and by replacing technical experts with MBAs, more than a few ill-conceived program decisions have come to pass. Perhaps most harmful, the new upper management has swept aside our prior culture of a flat management structure which trusted their delegates to make the right decisions and independently execute them, and replaced it with a tall management structure which second-guesses technical decisions all the way up the ladder. The new company org chart is still flat at the bottom, but now features a towering spire of upper management, with program leads reporting to VPs, who report to Senior VPs, who report to Senior Exec VPs, etc... It seems every few months, a new layer of upper management is invented, into which another one of Bob Smith's Honeywell bros is inserted. And every time this happens, the CEO becomes more disconnected from the real technical problems at hand. Rob Meyerson lead by example by being a technically gifted leader who knew exactly what he was asking for when he said "Go do this!", and we respected him for it. Our current management substitutes lead-by-example for lead-by-powerpoint. We now have "Leadership Principles", complete with buzzwords that would not be out of place on corporate motivational posters. The company equity incentive program is nearly worthless. The conditions required for one to cash-in on company are very strict and narrow, and so unlikely to occur that the equity agreement is better used as toilet paper.

1.0
Aug 3, 2019

Going downhill fast!!

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Used to have free lunches on fridays.

Cons

Poor management. Unfulfilled promises. Uncompetitive compensation. Preferential treatment.

2.0
Jul 30, 2019

Clueless "leadership" riding the biggest gravy train in the world

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Occasionally you can learn some great new technology (some forward-looking software people do still exist here). But it's rare. I was very impressed by how impressed some folks were with themselves -- hmmm...is that a pro or a con?

Cons

the place is chock-full of technology troglodytes who are experts at burrowing up the right places. We somehow manage to procure the worst tools and systems for the company to use... there are some things in use at the company that defy common sense. I sometimes wonder if there is a nice little cottage industry of kickbacks with the various vendors and contracting companies who serve up this junk. I can't explain it any other way. (Jeff! look into it). I feel sorry for most of the software engineers who are pulled into mind-numbing projects of trying to integrate dumb system 1 with dumb system 2. There is an endless number of such projects and engineers are constantly leaving to better pastures because of this. Shoe-shining and yes-manning will send you places at Blue. Disagree with a thin-skinned and immature manager and you might as well be carrying your box out the door. Management that is quick to apply pressure but slow to reward is mediocre at best.

Viewing 1135 - 1137 of 1,216 Reviews

Glassdoor has 1,393 Blue Origin reviews submitted anonymously by Blue Origin employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Blue Origin is right for you.