Great benefits and a wide variety of opportunities to advance. - Anonymous employee TTX Employee Review

5.0
27 Oct 2016
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

If you are willing to prove yourself, you will be given opportunities to advance in your career. The benefits are absolutely amazing.

Cons

Problem employees are often put on the back burner. Great employees are often worked more to compensate for the problem employees in the group. This includes management as well. TTX speaks highly of standardization, but if you actually look around at the different locations, standardization is not as utilized as it should be. With the fast rate of expansion in the company, communication is starting to plummet. More than often, corporates response for questions are "I will get back to you". The problem is they never "get back to you". Also, with the fast expansion happening, employees are hired into positions that they are not ready for, or should not be in at all.

Explore other reviews about TTX

5.0
5 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

TBD this is all very new

Cons

None so far, everyone is polite. If you have to throw rocks, rail equipment does not go into a shop / under a roof much. You better be able to tolerate a bit of weather. Not so much a con as a fact.

3.0
9 Jun 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

TTX has real upsides if you fit the profile. It’s stable, recession-resistant (railcar leasing doesn’t evaporate in a downturn), and mid-career lateral hires can land meaningful compensation bumps. The perks are legitimate.

Cons

The cons are harder to ignore. Comp sits below market median. Benefits have quietly eroded — the no-premium healthcare that used to be a flagship perk is gone — and RTO crept from two days to three. But the real issue is structural. Large parts of the org are optimized for the appearance of productivity rather than measurable output. If you’re results-driven, you’ll hit a ceiling fast — not because of your performance, but because the incentive structure doesn’t reward movement. Lifers dominate, and the institutional default is status quo preservation. Attrition tells the story: most ambitious hires are gone within two years. TTX is an exceptional landing spot if comfort and stability are the goal. If they’re not, the stagnation becomes suffocating quickly.

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