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Reasonable developer opportunity - Anonymous employee AER Employee Review

3.0
Aug 17, 2014
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

If you are on the right project, this is a great place to develop weather software. You will learn weather and aerospace science - that is also their usual background. Benefits are fairly good.

Cons

Science is on the bleeding edge, but software technology is definitely not. Long-term projects are rarely, if ever, refactored for newer technology. Financial IT is also obsolete (paper time sheets, expenses and purchasing). There is a silo mentality, with not much opportunity to transfer projects. Few opportunities for more senior developers from outside. Bonus is uncompetitive within the SW industry.

Explore other reviews about AER

5.0
Oct 22, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Flexibility. Freedom to do self-directed research in the field. Time to develop as a scientist. Working with modern problems in space weather. Interesting topics and problems. Safe work environment. Extremely nice and intelligent peers and colleagues. A community of devoted scientists.

Cons

The pay is low. Raises are rare.

3.0
Oct 9, 2015
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Top-notch science. Smart co-workers. Family friendly (flexible hours, kid's holiday party with gifts). Good benefits (no or low health deductibles, 401k match, ESOP through parent company). Accomplishments are acknowledged and highlighted in company meetings. Hybrid of academia and corporate worlds.

Cons

Low pay (10 to 20% below market). Large raises (greater than 3%) only if you threaten to quit with another job offer. Accomplishments are not rewarded (Employees of the year only get a paper certificate in a plastic frame). Company is completely reliant on government contracts (essentially a consulting company) so if there are no new contracts in the pipeline, your job is not secure. They have not been able to replace the "big" contract that is winding down. Therefore there is little to no opportunity for growth and promotions (company isn't growing and upper management rarely turns over). Support departments (HR, Finance, IT) are understaffed, overworked and treated as disposable and easily replaceable (they are seen as overhead or cost centers as opposed to being positioned as a corporate resource). Decision making often based upon cost, not upon needs. Traditional old school inflexible top down corporate management and culture. Little to no formal training available.

4
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