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Essential Design

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Good place to work, not very organized - Researcher Essential Design Employee Review

4.0
16 Apr 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

A largely friendly place to work, with interesting projects, encouraging independence and initiative. The majority of the people who work there are intelligent, engaged with life, and professional.

Cons

The upper-level/older engineering staff is condescending to & dismissive of women (regardless of their qualifications or experience level), and the management is not very good at communicating feedback, expectations, or future needs.

Explore other reviews about Essential Design

5.0
9 Aug 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great colleagues Challenging work Cultural awareness and cultivation Good benefits Very low turnover

Cons

Work can be very challenging Low turnover makes it difficult to get promoted

4.0
31 Oct 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Essential is a small, tightly-knit family of people dedicated to doing great work for interesting clients. The people are friendly and helpful -- if guidance or assistance is needed, all you have to do is ask. Great company culture. The diverse range of projects (all kinds of medical, consumer, and commercial products) keeps things interesting and your mind engaged. Because of the small size of the company, each team member can provide significant impacts on their projects, if they have the initiative.

Cons

Since each person is often working on multiple projects (in different stages of the development process) at once, the work requires people who can multitask, keep the "big picture" for each project in view, and still focus on the important details. Some people aren't suited to this. (This is par-for-the-course for consulting firms, but different than most corporate jobs.) Disciplines (research, design, engineering) are relatively "silo-ed", sometimes working in an independent / separated manner rather than collaborating cohesively throughout a project. The industrial design team sometimes struggles with thinking through the manufacturability of their concepts, leading to frustratingly iterative debates with the engineering team.

4
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