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Lutron Electronics

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Such a Joke - Anonymous employee Lutron Electronics Employee Review

1.0
10 Oct 2015
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Nice people work there, it's busy, work is interesting, no layoffs. Nice cafeteria, on site gym, trail to run or walk on.

Cons

Personnel (not called HR - they are stuck in the 70s) is not a place you want to go to. It's evil. People who work in that group make it their life's work to make employees' lives unbearable. It literally is like a cult. Folks in management really believe the crap that comes out of their mouths. You have to feel sorry for them, really - they have no sense of reality. They don't care about their employees. If you leave at 5, management acts like you are taking a half day, even though you come in early and work through lunch more often than not. Work and projects are assigned as the moods of people change. Effort and time are put into projects and they end up being shelved because it's not the flavor of the week anymore.

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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