Buyer (employees) Beware - Anonymous employee Leidos Employee Review

1.0
14 Apr 2014
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I have worked for SAIC/Leidos for over 15 years and I can't say there are any longer many things to be proud of with this company. What used to be a very good team environment where everyone worked together to succeed has been replaced by a "each person for themselves" attitude that is very disheartening.

Cons

Upper management is horrible. There lack of communication or poor communication has created the work environment noted above. Few if any employees feel that their performance matters much. If you bust your butt and work hard you are looked at well while there is work but the minute a project ends you are dumped without so much as "how do you do". The feeling you are left with is your efforts mean nothing in the long run and everyone is "Out for themselves"

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5.0
22 June 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Ability to work from home

Cons

There is few opportunities to promote

3.0
27 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Leidos provides opportunities to work on complex government programs with meaningful technical challenges. Depending on the contract and team, there can be exposure to cloud infrastructure, cybersecurity, systems engineering, networking, and mission-focused work that is difficult to find elsewhere. The company also has a large footprint, so there may be internal opportunities for people who are able to navigate the organization.

Cons

My experience was that the quality of management varied significantly by program. Communication around expectations, roles, and priorities was often inconsistent, and decisions that affected employees were not always explained clearly or handled in a transparent way. Work-life balance also depended heavily on local management. Flexibility that existed in practice could be changed quickly, and employees were sometimes left trying to reconcile changing expectations with existing workloads and personal obligations. In my view, the company would benefit from stronger oversight of program-level management decisions, especially where employee responsibilities, workplace flexibility, and performance feedback are concerned. I also found that technical decision-making was sometimes driven more by schedule pressure than by sound engineering judgment. On complex government programs, that can create unnecessary risk and frustration for employees who are trying to do things correctly.

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