OK for a first job, head for the door after 3 years - Software Developer General Motors (GM) Employee Review

2.0
2 July 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Generous benefits (401k, holidays, PTO) Depending upon your boss you might have the option of flex schedule For college hires the raises every 6 months and final promotion after 3 years leaves you close enough to market rate salary wise. The company bonus in previous years was overly generous. Now that sales are declining people have become used to unrealistic > 100% multipliers. I started as a college hire in 2013 and stayed with the company for over 5 years working in different capacities. If you want to move around and try different roles that is possible now (was not so easy when I started).

Cons

At this point the red tape is out of control. Whole teams exists for quality assurance, and no I am not talking about testers. I am talking about people who don't code or know how to code, reviewing your changes with a checklist and creating more and more hoops to jump through to do your job. Do you want a database refresh? Ok fill out this Sharepoint excel request, then copy all the data from that excel file into a special format Excel. Take the special format excel and copy its structure into an email and reference the line number. Email that to the DBA (not-even-kidding). The company has built such a wall around deploying stuff it consumes 50+% of your development cycle. The company was hesitant to deal with low performers for years and now they are paying the price. Generous benefits and an environment where free-riding was pretty easy has resulted in lower than expected attrition. Now that auto sales are declining and we are entering into a crunch cycle, HR and management is trying to clean house. Under performers are being put on performance improvement plans (a nice way of saying 'go away') and those who don't leave once on these plans are typically fired within 6 months. Hiring, except for college hires, has been curtailed. Unfortunately the above does not bode well. Already many teams are overworked carrying the burden of the non-workers. Now that many under performers are being sent packing, their partial workload falls on the rest of the team. This is causing the already overworked high performers who are fed up with the red tape to leave. What is left is mediocrity at this point.

Explore other reviews about General Motors (GM)

5.0
24 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great company culture and work life balance

Cons

Slow mobility at such a big company

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General Motors (GM) Response
2mo
Thank you for taking the time to share your experience with us. We would like to thank you for your contributions to GM and appreciate the feedback! We encourage you to speak with your leader about how you might be able to uncover new challenges and opportunities to assist in your career development.
2.0
4 July 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Benefits are decent……. IF you survive

Cons

Can name a few… 1. Poor leadership who hire their buddies and promote them into management level without any sense of technical or automotive knowledge 2. Lack of promotions or opportunities to move internally. If you are starting your career or mid way wanting growth. THIS IS NOT THE PLACE! YOU ARE A NUMBER! (Example, ask all the QA folks who got sacked while their managers got moved around into different roles and engineering manager roles? Not sure how that works but ok 3. Let’s talk about the business now. Leadership doesn’t care if you know or understand the business. This automotive industry is dying. They try to copy Tesla and Mary and leadership can not get the world Tesla out of their mouth. Let’s focus more on autonomy please and not trying to be like someone else…. 4. Stacking raking kills. I understand GM is a business and not a scalable one but that’s not because of the business… it’s because of the people leadership keeps deciding to keep and fire. Ffs get rid of Lowell Kercheville and Stacy Lynett. Both have done no good for either company and neither has their leaders under them. Mhmmm coincidence?

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