Not the Best for Everyone - Engineering Manager PACCAR Employee Review

1.0
Dec 18, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

This review is for the PACCAR Technical Center in Mount Vernon, WA, although I’m sure that most of these points apply to any of the PACCAR facilities located in NW Washington. I’ll split this review into 2 sections depending on if you’re an engineer or a manager. As there are upsides and downsides to working at any company, here’s a brief overview of what to expect so you can decide if this is really the best fit for you. **ENGINEER** This place is for you if: -You prefer to keep your head down and not make waves. -You are satisfied with a below-market salary with merit increases that barely outpace inflation. -You don’t expect to be rewarded in any meaningful way for going above and beyond your job description. -You can handle doing the work of multiple people day in and day out with very little guidance or recognition from management. -You have thick skin and strong bones because you’ll be continuously run over by buses and expected to continue on like nothing happened. Remember, NOTHING stands in the way of making money! -You don't mind not being passed over for promotions, recognition, or jobs by considerably less-qualified people. It's your own fault, after all. -You're willing to paint your nose brown day-in and day-out to advance your career. -The ONLY brown part of your body is your nose (pale male applicants only please). **MANAGER** This place is for you if: -You meet the PACCAR definition of a manager: Male, white, incompetent, “yes-man”, and no facial hair below the upper lip (to satisfy our Lord and Savior, Master Mark Pigott). -OR you’re comfortable being the token diversity candidate so upper management can say “See! Look at him! We don’t have a diversity problem!” -You’re happy to have no strategic, unified vision for the division you work for, essentially floating rudderless in a sea of your own mediocrity. -Speaking of, your preference is to reward nepotistic mediocrity and punish those who fail to conform. -You excel at toeing the company line, even through times of ethical and legal murkiness. Don't worry, you'll be guided by a gaggle of well-paid attorneys to keep PACCAR out of trouble. -You’re eager to keep secrets and make policies generic and ambiguous so your employees can fail, because hey, what better way to learn, right? -You’re capable of lifting over 150 pounds so you can swiftly throw your employees under the bus before they realize what’s happening.

Cons

This place is NOT for you if: -You have any sense of integrity or moral compass. -You care about people and want the company you work for to do the same.

Explore other reviews about PACCAR

5.0
May 30, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Wonderful internship experience. I truly enjoyed every aspect of the internship, from the people and team culture to the meaningful projects and great location. It was an incredibly positive learning experience, and I would highly recommend working there.

Cons

While the business professional dress code may not be for everyone, I personally didn’t mind it and felt it contributed to the professional environment.

1.0
Apr 15, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Not much, if you want a place that's okay with mediocrity, then welcome.

Cons

They blindly follow industry trends not industry standards. We have an initiative to use AI to increase productivity, without a proper plan, without security in mind and lack of general understanding. Consistently understaffed, for example there are teams or parts if teams that have max 4 developer type roles with 36 apps or APIs to support - this has lead to inconsistent code and effort as employees are spread too thin to be able to deliver quality work. Management refuses to take responsibility for issues that arise from being understaffed. Teams are not consistent in what tools and pipelines are used causing even more confusion and delays. Double standards: they don't want to properly promote or give raises to hard workers. Upper management made it clear to direct managers that "meets expectations" was a fine thing to give... To employees doing more than their fair share of work and are doing work outside of their role since they have no one else to do it do to being understaffed.

3
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