Incompetence and complexity hinder effective execution - Anonymous employee HP Inc. Employee Review

1.0
10 Apr 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

So incompetent at holding people accountable its easy to hide in plain sight.

Cons

Alright—if you strip out the product categories and just look at how the machine runs, a few patterns keep 1. Strategy drift at the top There’s a lingering question about where the company is really headed. When leadership narratives shift or feel narrow, teams start optimizing for interpretation instead of execution. You end up spending cycles aligning to a moving target instead of pushing something forward with conviction. 2. Matrix complexity slows everything down HP runs a heavy matrix—global, regional, category, functional. In theory, that gives scale. In practice, it creates friction. Decisions require multiple stakeholders, and accountability gets diluted. You can do great work and still feel like you’re pushing through mud to get it live. 3. Budget-first thinking vs. strategy-first A lot of planning starts with constraints instead of ambition. Budgets get locked before priorities are fully clear, which forces teams into defensive trade-offs. You’re not asking “what wins?”—you’re asking “what can survive?” 4. Market vs. global tension Markets want immediate results. Global teams think longer-term. That tension never really goes away. It can lead to reactive execution, where you’re constantly reshaping plans to meet short-term pressure rather than building something that compounds. 5. Long product and planning cycles The business runs on long timelines. That’s normal for hardware, but it clashes with how fast marketing, retail, and digital move now. By the time something launches, the context may have shifted—and you’re left adjusting mid-flight. 6. Resource reallocation midstream Even when you lock a plan, resources can get pulled into higher-priority asks from markets or leadership. That unpredictability makes it harder to build momentum or see initiatives through cleanly. 7. Hard to protect focus Because everything is interconnected, priorities bleed into each other. You’ll often be asked to support adjacent efforts “just this once”—and suddenly your core initiative is diluted. Staying focused takes real discipline. 8. Innovation can feel constrained by scale Big company advantage is reach. The downside is risk tolerance. Truly bold ideas can get softened through layers of review, testing, and consensus. You still innovate—but it’s often incremental rather than disruptive. 9. Internal signaling matters more than it should How something is presented internally can carry as much weight as the idea itself. That means more time spent packaging, aligning, and socializing work before it even gets judged on impact. 10. External pressure seeps inside Between investor expectations, cost controls, and broader market dynamics, there’s a constant undercurrent of “protect the numbers.” That can tighten decision-making and make long-term bets harder to justify.

Explore other reviews about HP Inc.

5.0
26 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

HP is a great company with a strong reputation, global brand recognition, and a long history of innovation in printing technology. The role is especially exciting because it sits within HP Industrial Print, supporting complex capital equipment sales transactions across areas like labels and packaging, corrugated packaging, publishing, direct mail, commercial printing, signage, and other graphics-related markets. The work feels meaningful because the contracting function directly supports major business deals and helps bring strategic customer transactions to closure. One of the biggest positives is the opportunity to work cross-functionally with Legal, Finance, Sales, Global and Regional Business Units, Service, IT, Operations, and other stakeholder teams. The role offers exposure to complex contract drafting, negotiation, risk analysis, audit and financial compliance, template management, CPQ tools, and strategic deal support. It is a great fit for someone who enjoys customer-facing contracts, problem-solving, and being a trusted advisor to senior sales and business leaders. The position also appears to offer strong professional growth. It involves negotiating non-standard terms, developing creative solutions, mentoring others on contracting best practices, and helping improve contract templates and processes. For someone with a legal operations, paralegal, contracts, or commercial legal background, this role provides a great opportunity to build deeper experience in enterprise contracting and sales operations within a large global technology company. HP also offers a competitive compensation range, with additional bonus and/or equity opportunities, along with a comprehensive benefits package that includes health, dental, vision, disability coverage, employee assistance, flexible spending accounts, life insurance, paid holidays, parental leave, and flexible paid vacation and sick leave. Overall, this role seems like a strong opportunity for someone looking to combine legal, business, sales, and operational skills in a collaborative and high-impact environment.

Cons

There are not many major cons. The only downside is that, depending on where you are located, you may not get to see many people from your immediate team in person because several team members are based abroad or on the West Coast, including areas like Idaho, Oregon, and Washington. That said, it also reflects how global and flexible the team is, so it is not necessarily a negative — just something to be aware of if you value frequent in-person collaboration.

1.0
3 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

You won’t find a more resilient, good‑humored, and quietly heroic group of employees anywhere. The real pros at HP are the folks who keep delivering results, supporting each other, and holding the place together — even as they’re asked to smile through baffling executive decisions, absorb constant reorganizations, and “embrace” strategies that seem designed by consultants who’ve never met an actual customer. If you want to work with people who can turn chaos into productivity and still crack a joke about it, HP’s rank‑and‑file are world‑class.

Cons

Despite consistently strong performance reviews and years of dedication at a senior level, HP’s decision to shut down our site while offering “relocation” — at my own expense, and only if I re‑apply for the job I already do — says everything about where this company has drifted. The old CEO’s infamous slip, “In HP Business First… I mean… Customer First,” has never felt more accurate. Leadership is disconnected from the realities employees face, yet continues to bring in PwC and other cost‑cutting consultants to tell them what employees have been saying for years. HP was once a company built on innovation, trust, and people. Today, it feels like a shell of that legacy — driven by short‑term cost cutting, site closures, and decisions that undermine both employee loyalty and long‑term business health. For a company that claims to value its people, the actions tell a very different story. Use caution if you’re considering building a career here. The culture and stability that once defined HP are fading fast.

1
See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All