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Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories

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Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories Reviews

4.0

74% would recommend to a friend

(760 total reviews)
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Edmund O Schweitzer III

82% approve of CEO

78% positive business outlook

Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories has an employee rating of 4.0 out of 5 stars, based on 760 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Manufacturing industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

760 reviews
1.0
7 Apr 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Attracts good people. Sometimes there is a Holiday bonus. Disaster discounts for customers when tragedy strikes them. CEO has been known to help some employees during critical times in their lives. Partial tuition reimbursement for education. Company participates in the United Way campaign. Exercise facility. Decent insurance.

Cons

In my first year at SEL I lived in and perpetuated the Public Relations (PR) Bubble that my hiring manager and HR sold me- "what a great place SEL is to develop your career". My Bubble was fed each Friday, during our weekly company-wide meeting/lunch where employees are effectively pumped with select SEL propaganda. However, starting in year two, and clearly during my third year I began to see, with my own eyes, the harsh reality that SEL is and my PR Bubble collapsed. With respect, I learned that the Electronic Relay Business is not the core business process at SEL, but rather the PR Machine that pumps employees and the community full of misinformation. Heck, even some of the "Best Places to Work" organizations have bought into our misleading propaganda. Do not accept an offer to work at SEL without hiring and paying for a professional third party (Industry firm or private investigator). You must know the facts about our working environment here at SEL. These Job Boards, or even asking someone you know at SEL is not good enough to make such an important decision. I suspect, that many of the "Positive" SEL reviews written on job boards are either from those employees who are still in the PR Bubble or have been written by our PR or Business Intelligence teams to try to "own the public perception". There are a few rare areas in the company where there are exceptions to this. Kudo's to those few managers who currently are pulling this off. Expect crazy, long-term overtime hours (If you try to take a vacation, expect to be working throughout it- time away from work to be with friends or family is not respected by SEL). Understand that although SEL is an ESOP, it is completely controlled by the CEO who "Sold" his company to each of us... The way the ESOP is designed, we have little rights or advocacy and the CEO dictates from top to bottom the daily affairs of the company. I personally think the ESOP is a very risky retirement plan where all of one's egg's are in one basket. I also think the CEO uses the ESOP to underwrite his "business" interests. Many of us are very concerned about not having access to the specific financial information on how the company is doing and where the money flows. We do get a powerpoint overview on total revenue, etc, but let's see the P&L, the Balance Sheet and where all the cash goes. Many of us want to know how the money flows to other SEL entities and to the "separate aviation company". All of the secrecy leads us to believe that something is not right. We do not get to see what the "Bank" has to say in their annual reports. Besides, they are too vested in the current process- we need an independent auditor to come in and unearth what is being hidden. This will never happen unless enough of us employee's find a way to organize and protect ourselves from the backlash of this type of effort. So given that so many of us fear for our livelihoods, most likely, nothing will change. The CEO has put each of us "Employee Owners" at risk by moving his family members into key leadership roles that they are not qualified to do. This creates a tough situation for everyone that regularly leads to excellent employees, who report to the family member, being let go just so the family member/CEO can try to "save face". This practice cripples our business and we are only a fraction of what we could be. There are typically a few bad apples in any company that need to be let go, however its backwards at SEL. We lose far too many of the best people because they do their job, identify a critical gap in our business and bring forward a respectful and responsible plan to solve it- or grow market share. You see, it has been our experience that the CEO does not separate himself from the business- meaning that he is the business and the business is him. So any gap or mistake that is unearthed threatens who he is as a person, he takes it very personally and he protects himself by regularly getting angry and "shooting the messengers". This may mean he publicly humiliates, demotes or isolates the Employee Owner. Other regular activities include being starved of current and future resources or the Employee just disappears overnight. All strategic and many of the tactical ideas on how to improve the business must be the CEO's, all others need not apply- or you will pay by either being ignored and/ or severely punished. After a person is fired or run off, their recommendations often have a funny way of becoming a good idea and something the CEO can now get behind. The CEO then takes credit for the improvements- ridiculous and unprofessional. This also manifests when someone has a solid industry technical idea- the founder will shoot it down, and then has an uncanny ability to resurface the idea as his own several months later. Astounding. My peers and I have always found it odd that our CEO regularly talks about freedom and traditional American values (openly pushing his own "espoused" political views on us). However, when you review the facts, his condescending, micromanagement "Dictator" approach limits creative insights and puts employees in a locked box. The voice of the people is rarely respected or even wanted. I wish the CEO would sell his stake or worst case, move into a Board only role and bring in, from the outside, some competent professional executive leaders who manage the day-to-day business and can help SEL stop digging its own pit. So what keeps the company afloat? Good employees who no longer live in the PR Bubble that have learned to play it safe, sacrifice their own "Dignity of Work," take the regular belittling, work the crazy overtime and hope they do not disappear overnight. To a large degree, the craziness becomes "normal" to us and we actually begin to "Identify" with the CEO. Under significant and prolonged duress, people will do almost anything to try to survive.

1.0
8 Apr 2018

Middle management nightmare

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Stable career so long as you don't go against middle management. Absolutely excellent benefits if you have a family.

Cons

Company has begun to ignore their values. SEL has great values, but recently tends to ignore them and treat their employees poorly as a result. It seems that the bottom line has become more important than the customer or the employees. Very low pay for engineers, but company expects engineers to be grateful and humble about their meager paychecks while also expecting them to put in 60+ hour work weeks. Middle management frequently hire incompetent people. People who have been fired for verbal abuse, drug violations, or dereliction in their duty will be re-hired while people who voice concerns to middle management over these hires are fired. When the company fires someone, they do it same day in a 30 minute process and try to bully you into signing a contract that signs away all anti-discrimination rights you may have. They often don't give good justification and search through people's electronic history to justify the firing after the fact.

3.0
6 Mar 2018

Good Company, Old-School Management

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

This company is very good for the local community. It provides lots of stable, decent-paying jobs with full benefits, and they give lots of money to charity. They also do things like give discounts to areas impacted by natural disasters. The on-site gym and health clinic are awesome, and it's nice to be in an employee-owned company, even if that doesn't translate to actually having any say over how company assets are used. The company also invests heavily in research and makes very high-quality products.

Cons

Many things have not changed at SEL in over 30 years, notably the leadership and management style. It's super hierarchical with a command-and-control style. Even with 5,000 employees, all significant decisions are made by about eight people who got to where they are largely by telling the company founder and president exactly what he wants to hear. For being a tech company, SEL is fearful of change and even technology (for instance, they're completely paranoid about USB memory sticks, cloud computing, or even having a company blog). People are not trusted to do their jobs, and because nobody feels empowered to make a decision, every single issue that comes up requires dozens of meetings and reviews, hundreds of wasted hours, and no actual decision until circumstances force the path of least resistance. Moving ahead in the company is all about tenure and playing politics; talent and hard work count for next to nothing. Those who try to make change or tell the emperor he has no clothes get punished. Employees are also heavily surveilled. In a nutshell, the company culture is defined by fear (on the part of employees) and arrogance (on the part of management).

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Glassdoor has 1,010 Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories reviews submitted anonymously by Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories is right for you.