Lenovo reviews

3.9

77% would recommend to a friend

(3,549 total reviews)
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Yang Yuanqing

87% approve of CEO

67% positive business outlook

Lenovo has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 3,549 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Lenovo employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the IT (Information Technology) industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

4K reviews
1.0
Oct 17, 2017

Con artists

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great benefits, and some good ideas, but they steal them from you. DO NOT INNOVATE FOR LENOVO. THEY WILL CHEAT YOU!!!

Cons

I am being laid off October 31, this year. I created, so far, 48 patents for Lenovo. They are now telling me when I am laid off I will not be paid for any patents that I have not signed over rights to. This totals around 30,000 dollars. So, they hired me a year and a half ago, exploited my intellectual property, and then laid me off, still owing me around 30,000 dollars for the patents. Not good business for a 'technology' firm. Do not expect to stick around if you get a job here.

2.0
Aug 15, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Only reason to work at Lenovo, at least the team I'm currently in, is to pay the bills, have medical insurance, and 401K (while it lasts...)

Cons

EXTREME LACK OF PRODUCTIVITY They could have stayed away from the old fashioned, inefficient IBM bloated processes, but they kept using the same processes over and over. All of the problems that this team had at IBM are still here, and even worse. There is no overall vision, no training for employees, managers only know how to move people from team A to team B, then add pressure while making everyone's life miserable. Add to this total madness where development of code happens out of people across all timezones and various parts of the world, and you have a recipe for disaster. Developers at the same time no longer care anymore, they write subpar code lacking quality, tightly coupled, unit testing anyone? Of course not! This is a big mess, a sinking ship, and eventually all US employees will be laid off. Rightfully so, since this is unsustainable. The only reason I'm still here is because I have to pay the bills, and because I haven't found a job yet elsewhere.

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Lenovo Response
10y
Interesting comments....not particularly inspiring to us considering you say the only reason to be here is to pay bills. That is not the sort of outlook that leads to success here. We do wish you the best moving forward as it doesn't look like you enjoy your work here. But, while you are with us before you leave, and we are paying you, you have an obligation to give us your very best. You can inspire those around you. You can communicate your concerns and lead to streamlined processes to fix things. You are part of the Lenovo family. We need you to help. If you have answers, we want you to act on them and make us better.
1.0
Feb 21, 2023

Garbage

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Salary starts out somewhat competitive. The campus is nice, there are some decent managers and co-workers who you can rely on to be team players.

Cons

Work quickly piles on you year after year while your salary slips behind industry average. You typically will earn a maximum 3% merit increase, and that's in good years. Instead, you are dependent on bonuses to make up the chunk of salary that doesn't keep up with inflation. Management totes this as a huge carrot to go after, but in reality, few truly benefit from it, starting at band 10 (the highest non-executive pay grade) and rising exponentially through the executive bands. This is why the rank-and-file are pushed so hard to produce those quarterly results -- so executives can get theirs. Job growth is non-existent. Those who tirelessly self-promote will succeed here while hard working team players will be pushed to the wayside and given more work to do without even a word of thanks or praise. Lenovo is rife with politics and nepotism and it has caused the culture and morale of the company to decline steadily over the past several years. This also leads into the ubiquitous sport of bullying by the favored members of staff and management, and the highly subjective annual evaluations that management gives you. Workload is usually unreasonable to start with, and you are expected to pick up any slack left behind if someone is laid off or a contractor is not renewed. Expect many late night work sessions and meetings with people overseas. Weekend work is also common if you're in engineering. Don't complain about working 12+ hour days for months on end, sacrificing health and family time to meet deadlines, because it will be met with biting criticism about how much you cost the company, and that you can be replaced with two engineers from China. Also, complaining about bullying will get you nowhere other than to be called "sensitive" or a "snowflake" and will put you further out of favor. You're expected to take it on the chin and not complain about being put down for your background, appearance, or life choices from someone who "out-ranks" you. It's like you've joined a fraternity filled with ignorant trust-fund types who have only seen privilege and entitlement their whole life and anyone who doesn't fit their ideals is wrong. HR knows about all of this and does absolutely nothing, other than to offer a perfunctory effort at "culture change", which usually dovetails into their only self-perceived pillar of strength: "diversity". I've heard endless spiels about how inclusive Lenovo is along with vague statistics of how women, minorities, and members of the lavender community are "doing great things", all to make Lenovo seem like it's in touch with the workforce of the 21st century. In reality, it's yet another distraction to keep employees thinking the grass is perfectly green where it is and to avoid taking issue with the real problems plaguing the company. The message here is, if you can become the poster child for something, even if it's completely superficial, you'll go reasonably far here. Shiny, loud, and new is valued much more than competent, quiet, and experienced. During Covid, it was proven that working from home kept the company going strong, but after things relaxed, it was strongly suggested, then demanded, that we return to campus. It became clear pretty quickly that this was due to Lenovo's "Look at me!" visibility culture, and that truthfully, the company can function just fine without layers upon layers of management whose only job was to attend meetings and to be seen around the office just to be seen. On top of that, the disingenuous buzzword-filled, game-show host personas of most in managers trying to put a positive spin on absolutely everything, including when people are laid off, is nothing short of nauseating. This leads me into my last point, and that is the constant threat of layoffs. Every year, even in good years -- where the company is literally setting record profits, layoffs happen, usually 2-3 times a year. Curiously enough, it's not always the lowest performing people that are let go. Many times, it's the ones who aren't in the right cliques and who aren't friends with people above the director level. Indeed, many laid off are over the age of 45 since that's when the cost of covering a family's health insurance starts to really look bad on the company spreadsheets. If (when) those laid off need to be replaced, it is done with someone overseas or someone in the US that is much younger, costing the company less to employ that person or, in some cases, people. Quality of work ultimately suffers, but being a publicly-traded company, it's only the next quarter's results that matter in the end.

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