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Edaptive Computing

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Edaptive Computing Reviews

3.4

59% would recommend to a friend

(74 total reviews)

Dr. Praveen Chawla

66% approve of CEO

61% positive business outlook

Edaptive Computing has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 74 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Edaptive Computing 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

74 reviews
2.0
11 Jul 2013

Be sure to get the whole story

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-40 hour work week because it is all government contracts, and very rare cases you'll get overtime. Although I don't know of anyone that has been approved for their extra time, so its all off the clock. -The "underlings" and middle management are some of the coolest guys* you'll ever meet. They will be fairly open about their opinions, and be super helpful to you. It took me a while to get to know more people, but I really like the people here, but that is the only reason this gets 2 starts. My super visor, PMs, and the guys sitting around me.

Cons

*I asterixed the guys because there are 0 women who work here that are not family of the CEO. I think it is pretty difficult to reach 55 people without a single female employee. Rumor has it, they will bring in women for interviews every couple of months just to say they tried, but in all reality they don't want women for who knows why. "distractions" I don't know. -Pro and con, majority of people will be hired within a week of contact. This is good if you are desperate for a job, which most people are when the reach this company. I think they recruit people who have been down on their luck so they can get them for a steal. They rush the contract process because they don't want to negotiate. Ask for a copy of the contract prior to making a verbal commitment, you probably will not receive it. Everyone here is under paid, and they want to catch you off guard so they can get you for a bargain as well. -leads me to a point about money. The administration is the largest set of penny pinchers I've ever met. Look around and you will see many examples of it. Furniture is from Ikea, Chewy Granola bars are rationed in the break room, coffee has a cover charge per cup, and a recent happening, a company picnic happened during office hours. We were told to make up the time for when we were at the park because it was going to last longer than our normal lunch hour. Also, lunch is not paid. 40 hour work week, 45 if you take an hour lunch every day. -Be 100% clear in any negotiating you do if you choose to get hired on (not recommended). I have heard people asking about getting more education and they will say "we support you getting your masters" and by support they mean they wont stop you from getting it, not that they would support you financially. Heaven forbid they invest in their workers. -But they do highly care about their personal "company" resume to sell themselves for more contracts. But the badges they are trying to put onto their website and proposals are just for show. I hear they have full intentions of not following up with processes once the whole company becomes "certified" with various programs, and just faking data every year after to maintain their certification. -Overhead: Anyone who becomes a Senior level/ Project Manager/ Supervisor will be micromanaged. Its how upper management works. Also I hear they don't give adequate time for any task which use overhead hours. Again, to cut back costs. If you are not willing to put money into the foundation of your company, you probably are not planning of being around long. -The handbook is dated for 2007, and is terribly written. This allows for management to make up the final ruling based on the situation and their opinion of you. Hardly any of it even is relevant any more. It references people who no longer work here and forms which no longer exist. They say you are going to get a 90 day review, but as with all policies, this can come at 60, 90, 6 months or even never. I have found that you only get called into a meeting if they found something and are going to ream you a new one so they can justify your lack luster salary. There is never any praise, if you are not getting attention, then you are doing well. Otherwise you are feeling wraith. (these statements are for upper management only, you direct supervisor will work with your and mentor you. Either that or this is the best game of good cop bad cop I've ever seen. I'm sorry if you are applying for an overhead position, aka non-developer) -Benefits are lackluster.

1.0
20 Feb 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

There are some really smart, really friendly, very professional people working here. Some of the project work is technically challenging and intellectually stimulating. If you were somehow able to remove the cancer that is destroying the company from the top and replaced it with normalcy, it might even be a decent place to work.

Cons

It is the most mismanaged, micro-managed environment I've ever been in. If it wasn't destroying the careers of some really great people, it'd be laughable. There is a culture of distrust and destruction that is driven by the senior management team. The physical environment is terrible. The office environment is dirty and staff are crammed into 4-foot wide workspaces. There are ~60 employees. Only one woman, who happens to be the co-owner. You are lied to.. from your very first interview. About the company. About the culture. About the work you will do. About everything. These lies continue while you work there. Eventually you will be pitted against your colleagues in a crazy he-said-he-said world in which nobody really said anything but the management team is out to get you, or them, and so makes a bunch of stuff up. After you work there awhile you kind of get used to it, in a sick Stockholm-syndrome kind of way. Its only when you get out and look back in that you realize how absolutely crazy it was to work there. There are questionable time and billing practices. There are unreasonable, unjustified, and frankly unbearable rules and regulations about how you must conduct yourself while on the job. There is no room for professional growth: You are either a developer, or a project manager/developer. Getting "promoted" to PM gets you more responsibility and eventually leads to your systematic destruction, not more compensation. It is an unquestionably toxic environment that should be avoided at all costs.

1.0
25 Apr 2014

Long Standing House of Cards

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good place to get your foot in the door at the entry level. You'll probably like your co-workers and it's a good place to make friends.

Cons

- This place gets cheap labor by preying on inexperienced engineers, supplies rock bottom salaries in general, and is solely focused on return on investments. This might work in the short run, but with high turnover and bad blood, new comers are forced to re-learn previously built systems without training or transition from the originators which has resulted in a culmination of stove-piped solutions with no real technical core. - The senior management has a servant/master mentality and if you are unfortunate to work under them you will be expected to provide a limitless amount of work and effort with very little incentives. For example, you will be told to write full 25 page proposals that aren't in your areas of expertise, are provided a mere 4 hours to perform research and are given a maximum of 16 hours to complete them. if you can't finish in this amount of time (it is highly unlikely that you would be able to), you are expected to do it on "your own time" and to respectfully decline is not a valid option. - if you plan on leaving the company be sure to use all of your vacation time beforehand unless you are prepared to fight a court battle to get compensated for it. - We were encouraged through email to write reviews saying how wonderful of a place to work it is. Half of the positive reviews on here seem fabricated -- many of them even have the EXACT same title.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 74 Reviews

Glassdoor has 77 Edaptive Computing reviews submitted anonymously by Edaptive Computing employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Edaptive Computing is right for you.