Altium Limited Reviews

3.2

45% would recommend to a friend

(237 total reviews)
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Aram Mirkazemi

40% approve of CEO

29% positive business outlook

Altium Limited has an employee rating of 3.2 out of 5 stars, based on 237 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Altium Limited employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

237 reviews
2.0
26 Sept 2022

Company with no concrete plans for India Team

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

WFH if that can be considered as pros

Cons

No Authority in India. Everything is dictated from China. Did not honour basic employment rights also

3.0
4 Mar 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Nice office, free lunch, easy growth to management. My boss was trying to make it work for me and others.

Cons

Top down poor management. Micro management at every level. Impossible to work technical management role because product ownership won’t let making technical or people decisions. You have to ask permission at every step. Company is build with culture of “don’t trust”. There was even time when my bosses boss said “how else besides micromanagement we can control engineers ? We can’t trust.” My technical ideas and plans were ignored then brought back to life all of a sudden few months later as someone else initiative… it’s impossible to work for someone who don’t make decisions. You can get approval for something that will bite you back for not asking permissions from more senior level management. Senior management team simply didn’t see any better. Company replaces local U.S employees for cheaper Eastern European employees. Can’t get pay increase unless you critical person with knowledge you keep to your self and you decide to leave. No comp plan in place. Product management owns engineering and technical operations, which bring all kinds of problems.

1.0
22 Aug 2024

I don't even know where to begin

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Altium pays well and won't fire you so long as you are willingly delusional and drink the Koolaid. The product is good and is a staple in the PCB design world and many customers won't leave because they're simply used to the Altium workflow.

Cons

You know that company you once worked for, the one that makes you shake your head every time you think about it? That company that was truly backward in nearly every aspect? You’re probably recalling a job from a few years ago, right? Well, I can assure you it wasn’t as disorganized, nonsensical, or downright chaotic as Altium. Whatever dysfunctional work experience you’ve had in the past likely feels like a utopia compared to this place. After my first month at Altium, I was surprised to see how many long-tenured employees there were. In the software industry, it's rare to find people who’ve stayed at the same company for 10, 15, 20, or even 25 years. Initially, I chalked it up to Altium being a company that takes care of its people. On some level, I even thought it was commendable. After all, who wouldn’t want to work for a company that avoids layoffs and offers upward mobility? But at Altium, upward mobility has nothing to do with merit. It’s about who yells the loudest and who can point fingers the fastest. There are a few individuals in leadership positions here who have no business being there, yet they act as if they’re business prodigies. The Dunning-Kruger effect is on full display, and despite their repeated failures, these people remain indispensable. You’d think the C-suite would have noticed by now, but the top ranks at Altium are completely detached from the business. In my two years with the company, I saw the CEO exactly once. And keep in mind, this isn’t a 50,000-employee organization—it’s relatively small. The lack of involvement from the C-suite only adds to the dysfunction, and frankly, it’s just weird. Had there been any awareness of the lack of accountability, leadership, and the alarming void of business and technology know-how (seriously, these people lack even a college-level understanding of business and best practices), they might have been able to steer the ship in the right direction. Instead, the ability to get promoted while being utterly ineffective has led to an extremely unprofessional environment. These individuals do whatever they please and refuse to listen to the experts hired for their experience. Most meetings feel like listening to your drunk uncle at Thanksgiving, angrily ranting about topics that have nothing to do with the purpose of the call. And despite numerous HR reports, nothing changes. There are even VPs who have managed to get others fired simply because they knew about their sleeping with sales reps. As a result, Altium is fractured into various factions and philosophies. The majority of employees here end up with no ambition or drive—because why would they? Despite being hired for a specific role, their responsibilities are eventually whittled down to practically janitorial duties. When they speak up about broken tech stacks, bad data, or dysfunctional sales cycles, they get reprimanded. Those in charge, who created these broken systems, can’t be exposed to their own failures. So, if you want to keep your job, you need to stay quiet and work without ambition. Altium (at least in the revenue org) is a culture of losers, where pride in one’s work is a rare commodity. Oh and these reviews talking positively about the culture and “the best place I have ever worked”? Absolutely no chance that they are real.

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Glassdoor has 265 Altium Limited reviews submitted anonymously by Altium Limited employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Altium Limited is right for you.