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United Airlines

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The new Sears - User Experience Designer United Airlines Employee Review

2.0
12 Dec 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

People there are nice, free flight benefits, business casual dress code, lots of corporate discounts. Flexible start times, and occasional work from home days.

Cons

Pay is low, raises are usually 0-1.5% a year. Very little creativity. Design ideas are always "how does Delta do it". Stakeholder wants trump user needs. Poorly managed departments, employees are treated like children. Promotions are based on favoritism, not performance. Good ideas are stolen by management and sold as their own. High turnover. Flight benefits are increasingly more difficult to take advantage of.

Explore other reviews about United Airlines

5.0
19 June 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

good pay , good hours, good co workers

Cons

stop the favortism and be fair in schedule

3.0
22 Apr 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

United is genuinely a good place to work in a lot of ways. The dev side has strong leadership, the work is interesting, and there are real engineers doing real things. When I started, I was proud to tell people where I worked.

Cons

The Quality Engineering org has gone downhill fast since the leadership change about two years ago. It's hard to overstate how much the culture has shifted. The focus now is almost entirely on offshoring roles to India, and the US team has been quietly squeezed—people being nudged toward retirement, others suddenly finding themselves with negative performance feedback after years of solid work. It doesn't feel issue-driven, it feels like a headcount strategy with a polite cover story. On top of that, we spent most of last year implementing process changes that look impressive in a slide deck but don't actually move the needle. Meanwhile, the QE org has drifted away from what the dev leadership is actually trying to build. We're solving problems no one asked us to solve while the real priorities sit on the side. It's frustrating to watch, especially when you know what this team used to be capable of. The day-to-day environment has gotten noticeably toxic. People are checked out, the good ones are looking, and there's a real sense that institutional knowledge is being treated as disposable.

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