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Lutron Electronics

Is this your company?

Preferential treatment from an old-style American company - Technical Applications Specialist Lutron Electronics Employee Review

3.0
23 Apr 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- 50s-era mentality of "taking care of employees" (i.e., once employed, you'll maintain employment barring something truly insane) - good benefits (healthcare/dental/vision on basic plan, etc.) - great 401k contributions (matching and profit sharing) - able to train naive employees with no electrical experience to achieve competency - extremely successful business. other departments may give better insight into this. financially secure even in times of hardship (no job losses from COVID, recession, etc.)

Cons

- emotionally/mentally demanding responsibilities during work hours with little to no wiggle room in free time/breaks due to department resources being stretched extremely thin - selective communication from management - little opportunity for growth outside of the TS department other than moving into a leadership position / management. growth opportunities are very slow and can take 2+ years to materialize after setting the goal with leaders. growth opportunities are dependent on the department being able to flex agents to fill gaps, which is often difficult/impossible - poor accountability within the team. team members who slack cause more work for others and leadership does little to intervene - pay at time of hire is often competitive, but yearly raises do not keep pace with inflation, let alone acting as actual raises for increased productivity/skills - not very diverse. "boys club" mentality. few company initiatives for inclusion or diversity.

Explore other reviews about Lutron Electronics

5.0
12 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great benefits and growth opportunities

Cons

None that I can think of

1.0
20 Mar 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

— Legitimate portfolio work: the role involved a full website overhaul and product PDP writing, which has real value on a CV — The company name carries weight and looks good on paper

Cons

Pay was consistently late — sometimes by three weeks. No explanation, no heads up, no acknowledgment of the stress this creates for contractors who don't have the luxury of waiting indefinitely for money they've already earned. On the day-to-day side: we were required to produce detailed logs of everything we did — long, tedious activity lists that served no clear purpose and ate into actual work time. The broader culture was captured perfectly in a phrase that came up regularly in stakeholder meetings: "I won't fall on my sword" or "I won't die on that hill" — or some variation of it. Upper management had a consistent habit of deflecting accountability downward onto contract workers, who had the least power and the least protection. When things went wrong, contractors were the convenient explanation. When things went right, that credit traveled elsewhere. If you're considering a contract role here, get your payment schedule in writing and ask very specific questions about how your manager operates. What's described as a flexible, collaborative environment may look quite different once you're in it.

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