Qualcomm reviews

3.8

73% would recommend to a friend

(10,961 total reviews)
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Cristiano Amon

70% approve of CEO

65% positive business outlook

Qualcomm has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 10,961 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Qualcomm 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

11K reviews
1.0
Mar 9, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Very nice, friendly and supportive colleagues. This is the only support system that can help you go through each day. Retirement place if you want to be a yes-man or if you join. RSU (Entrance stock grant), ESPP (up to 15% of base pay).

Cons

Too many negative experiences here, hence 1-star review. High turnover rate in Operation (Front end). Low loading from December 2021 (Context: Semicon is booming due to chip shortage, yet this company loading drops significantly!). Hiring freeze since Jan 2022, OT is also highly controlled since then. Under Qualcomm branding, but culture and system are still RF360. Systems are messy, little to none automation (OI & IT team are stuck in another dimension?). Manual fab with manual work! A few sites in Singapore are getting shut down. Very minimal increment, below industry's benchmark. Only received $10 increment in 2020. Firefighting everyday doing line sustaining with not much value-added projects. Very slow career progression, management favours old birds who are "loyal".

3.0
Feb 3, 2017

Not worth it

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Opportunity to travel around the world. Used to be able to fly business class. Working with smart and driven people

Cons

The culture is absolutely terrible. Within my team, turnover was more than 50% last year. People dropped like flies. Why? Because management only cares about meeting its numbers. They do not care if they kill their staff in the process of doing so, by making them work insane hours and jump through hoops just to meet expectations. As long as they hit their goals and look good in front of their managers, they're happy. Management will lie to you about promotion potential from day 1 (interviews). They will keep dangling the potential to be promoted in front of you, just to get you to work harder for them. In the end, you (along with many others who were promised the same thing) will be sorely disappointed. I joined the company thinking it would be great, that it was the best place to work in San Diego, but trust me, it's not worth the pain, sweat, and tears to have the "Qualcomm" name on your resume.

1.0
Jun 20, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

During my time, we used to have individual offices, but I hear that’s changing. Great travel benefits while you travel for work, I heard that’s changing too. Great health benefits, $0 deductible, $10 copay for doctor visits, $10 for medication; I hear that’s changing starting 2016. Pretty good pay, but if you work 60 to 80 hours, it isn’t worth that much. Free gym, that’s still the same, yay!

Cons

Some serious non-sense meetings. I don’t think I have seen as much time wasting and mud slinging meeting as the ones that Qualcomm have. Decisions need to be “socialized” in a “democratic fashion.” I can feel my stomach tighten at these buzzwords. The managers were not big on taking responsibility, so it’s my responsibility to convince all participants. Sounds great in theory, but in practice, this just means you got to do the hard work to convince more people, or one week later, you are sitting through another meeting talking about the same thing. I rarely see meetings produce to-do list and action items. Most meeting last 30 mins or an hour, even though they really could be shortened. I’ve seen level 3 engineers’ days being fully booked with meetings, and sometimes double booked, so they better do work during nights and weekends. But really, the worst part of meetings is mud slinging shouting matches that occur when some features break. One time we had frequent crash in a handset; it was traced to a watchdog condition. One of the conditions that might trigger it was a full heap. So we reasonably asked if the responsible parties could check memory leaks. I could swear someone was getting bloody murdered by the loud shouting and responsibility deflecting. Waste of time all around. Stodgy, antiquated, monotonous software strategy! I worked in QIS (Qualcomm Internet Services), a purportedly web services division of the company. But there was much attitude against integrating emerging practices and technology. We even had a meeting back in 2013 from legal telling us not to participate in open source forums (not code contribution, but just Q/A forums), not to sign an 3rd party agreements (which effectively means not to download Android SDK, iOS SDK) without informing the legal department first. Of course, the bigger disappointment is that even when I was leaving, I hardly saw modern practices like continuous delivery, continuous integration, DevOps, continuous testing, etc, etc. Each handset software release takes weeks in straight waterfall (dev -> test -> integration -> release). Even with a lengthy schedule, software often ship with major undiscovered bugs. I used to snigger at the term “feature complete release;” because it might as well mean crash after 5 minutes. I feel senior employees at Qualcomm San Diego can really benefit a lot by taking an externship at lean startups and actually learn something about efficiency and process automation. Duplication of efforts. Where do I begin on this one… There are often multiple internally developed or internally available tools for you to do the same thing, but good luck to you if you need help setting it up. To give you an example, I needed to do some integration testing with some QC partner corporations. One of the tasks is automated dialing and torture testing. Supposedly there were 3 tools available for me to use. One was developed by a separate QC division; and it was obviously meant to do some serious heavy lifting. I couldn’t use it because our liaison couldn’t get the help, and the customization effort to get it to use look into LTE protocol instead of CDMA was high. Another tool was developed by an outside consulting firm; we couldn’t use it because it didn’t have the right driver. Yet another internally developed tool was not used for a reason or another I couldn’t remember. So I had to write a script to do automated dialing. Just to think, 3 separate groups got credit for developing their tools (and got credit), then moved on, and never thought about supporting them again. Apparently my experience was not unique. Slow pace of advancement. As a lot of people have mentioned before, doing hard work for long period of time often don’t get you the advancement. Fixing software bugs and pushing out new releases from 9AM to 9PM day after day will maybe get you to the next level after 5 years. Majority of Qualcomm departments are not growing, so your advancement opportunity is limited. Much of the employees at Qualcomm are pretty young, so advancement through attrition is really not an option. When I was quitting, I was offered advancement to stay. This really doesn’t inspire loyalty.

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