Kodak Vancouver...still one of the best places to work! - Management Eastman Kodak Employee Review

4.0
7 Feb 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Here in Vancouver we tarted out as Creo and were acquired in 2004. As time moves on the culture has changed a little but the senior management here has not. The culture is one of shared information, shared direction and shared success.

Cons

Rochester. Who knows what they do or what they are thinking.

Explore other reviews about Eastman Kodak

5.0
29 Sept 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good company and chill work

Cons

Pay is below market levels

2.0
23 Dec 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

To be fair, there are smart, capable people here, and the Kodak name still opens doors. But culture and execution matter more than branding. Without clarity, trust, and leadership engagement, even good ideas struggle. I don’t regret the experience as it was instructive. But if you’re considering joining, ask very specific questions about role boundaries, feedback cadence, and how decisions actually get made. Don’t confuse constant motion with real progress.

Cons

Working at Kodak was an eye opening experience in how large, legacy organizations try to reinvent themselves while still dragging along all the habits that made reinvention necessary in the first place. It often felt like roles were constantly shifting, ownership was unclear, and people were operating on instinct rather than alignment. There was a lot of activity, plenty of meetings, and very little agreement on who actually owned what. One colleague in particular somehow ended up doing several jobs at once. That may sound impressive, but in practice it created confusion and friction. When one person tries to be everything, it leaves everyone else in an awkward and unnecessary position.Leadership was mostly absent until it wasn’t. There was also a noticeable top down culture. Certain personalities didn’t invite discussion so much as compliance. Offering alternative viewpoints wasn’t encouraged, and collaboration tended to flow in one direction. Confidence often crossed into condescension, which made an already challenging environment harder than it needed to be.

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