Best for new professionals or Older Managers looking for a stable landing pad where they can finish their careers. - Marketing Esri Employee Review

1.0
18 Sept 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

1. Comprehensive benefits and adding your spouse and children is completely free. 2. Beautiful gated campus and private security so you won't worry about your car being broken into or be bothered while walking across the Esri campus. 3. Paid hourly. Any extra time worked counts toward your paycheck

Cons

1. Pay is very low when compared to the rest of the industry. Corporate takes their time reviewing promotion requests and the "do the job before you get it" mentality means that you'll often be expected to assume extra responsibilities for 6+ months before you get a bump in pay. On top of that, pay rises are often dangled for months by management before they become reality. 2. Esri consistently tries to improve its impact so that it places itself at the forefront of the industry. This means there is less money for staffing, which often leaves teams understaffed and overworked. Again, Corporate moves slow so if a member of your team quits you can expect them to take months finding their perfect candidate while you and your team cover the gap left by your former coworker. It can often feel like Esri extracts full value from their workforce by squeezing them to their limits. It's my observation that burnout is a very real and prevalent reality amongst at least half of the departments at this company. 3. Depending on your department, management can be very clique-y. In departments where turnover is high, it can be several years before you're treated like a permanent employee. 4. The Dangermonds are very old fashioned and don't believe in work from home opportunities. As far as I know, a few positions offer 1-2 WFH days if you have worked for them since before COVID but new hires aren't given the option. 5. Corporate life means that much of your working time will be spent wading through protocol and established channels with several checkpoints for approval. Compared to a private/small company, it can be very frustrating navigating a system designed to slow things down.

Explore other reviews about Esri

5.0
17 June 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great people and very flexible working conditions

Cons

There are no negatives to this job

2.0
12 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Esri pays your health insurance. A few extra holidays that other companies may not offer.

Cons

-Below average pay for California. Already a struggle living out here due to cost of living. -Support services is a mess. We have to bend over backwards for customers always teetering on scope of support. Might as not even have those guidelines anymore if it's a constant battle for internal resources to back you. -Constant releases of software that breaks customer workflows. Too many bugs. Lack of QA. -Whats the point of middle management if all decisions have to come from higher ups that have no understanding of supports day by day. -Unwillingness to let senior employees work from home. And if you do work from home they hold it against you if you want to apply to an internal position. Almost like a thinly veiled threat. -Other teams feel the need to steam roll support sometimes, often leading to fragmented relationships. -Lastly there is way too much work and never enough people.

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