Sweatshop - Engineering Program Manager KLA Employee Review

3.0
24 Jun 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Opportunity to grow professionally among the team of highly qualified peers is the best part of KT experience. It is a good professional school that will prepare you to a career at any another company. 5 years at KT is time well invested. More will be hazardous to your health.

Cons

Sweatshop, constant threat of a layoff without regard to seniority and/or contributions, 60 hours weeks is considered normal, 75-80 hours will sooner or later get you a promotion, 50 hrs a week is a ticket to the next layoff. Offshoring hard core engineering work (both HW and SW) hurts morale and bottom line. Compensation tends to be on a lower side compared to competition.

Explore other reviews about KLA

5.0
10 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Strong technical depth and industry leadership. Talented colleagues and meaningful work.

Cons

Organizational processes can be relatively conservative. The skills developed are highly valuable within semiconductor equipment and imaging-related industries but may be less directly transferable to unrelated sectors.

1.0
5 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

If you’re looking for a place where accountability doesn’t exist and you can do the bare minimum while getting paid maximum overtime, this is your spot. No approval needed, no questions asked—just stay late, watch YouTube, and collect your paycheck (plus free food if you linger long enough). Weekends are basically a free-for-all since the people who are supposed to supervise are either absent or the worst offenders.

Cons

This place is what happens when a parent company buys a smaller one and then completely forgets it exists. There is zero meaningful oversight. Management knows exactly what’s going on—they just don’t care as long as quotas are eventually met. Efficiency, integrity, and actual productivity mean nothing here. Documentation is either nonexistent or completely useless, full of errors and missing critical information. Parts are constantly missing, and instead of fixing the system, people exploit it to justify delays and stretch their hours. The entire operation rewards time-wasting over competence. The culture actively punishes anyone who tries to work a normal, honest 8-hour day. Want recognition or a raise? Better start padding your hours. The more time you burn, the more management “appreciates” you. It’s not about results—it’s about how long you can pretend to be working. Managers, being salaried, conveniently disappear when it matters most—nights and weekends—while turning a blind eye to the dysfunction they fully understand. Leadership isn’t absent by accident; it’s absent by choice.

2
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