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General Dynamics Land Systems

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General Dynamics Land Systems reviews

3.3

45% would recommend to a friend

(596 total reviews)
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Dave Paddock

47% approve of CEO

36% positive business outlook

General Dynamics Land Systems has an employee rating of 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 596 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The General Dynamics Land Systems employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Aerospace & Defense industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

596 reviews
1.0
Jun 28, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

9/80 Work Schedule Health Insurance The buildings have doors

Cons

I left GDLS in Sterling Heights, Mi willingly three years ago. I worked there 5 years right out of college as a project manager. I left because I absolutely hated it. I couldn't stand to think of going to work in the morning and had to drag myself there in misery step-by-step. It is the most toxic, mind-numbing and in-bred work environment or organization I have ever been a part of. I wouldn't have been this harsh three years ago after having left the company, but my experiences at real, modern and people centered organizations have made me realize just how bad it was. I was reading some of the reviews on here and started to feel like I felt when I worked there and it was immediately depressing as hell. I wish I was exaggerating. You will be made to feel like a small, worthless cog that's sole purpose is to slog through life with your eyes to the ground waiting for orders from the enlightened managers on-high who have all the good ideas and see you for the worthless plebe you are. The executives refer to people as if they are products ("We are selling the USG 10 people, I don't think that price is too high at all."). The managers are too busy seeing who is king of the mountain and protecting their worthless empires to change anything for the better. Those that have been there for a while either check out and do nothing, or carry all the water for the rest of the burnouts. The young and talented are like Unicorns: they make the place better until they either run away or assimilate into just another donkey. Unless you are one of the chosen ones, you will be ignored at meetings, your ideas will be shot down out of hand and managers will ignore you and act like you don't exist. Racism was rampant. Nepotism and sex would get you promotions. They played Fox News in the hallways. You see, all they are doing is playing a game. The game is to talk the USG into giving them as much money as they possibly can for more and more tanks that they don't need and then milk the contracts of every last penny, even if it means forcing your employees to work over their winter vacations doing nothing but padding their time sheets. For those of you that don't think its that bad, think again. Look through the rest of the reviews on this and other sites and you will see a very clear pattern of the same complaints. Oh, and by the way, if you work there and think I'm exaggerating how bad it is, I would have thought the same thing until I experienced what its like to work with people who see me as more than a cog in the machine that pumps money into their crooked pockets. Its very likely that your affection for the company, if you have any, is actually either ignorance or Stockholm syndrome. GET OUT NOW!!! RUN!!!

3.0
Jul 16, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Some great people to work with, every other Friday off (9/40 work weeks), some people have worked their whole lives in the company - long term is possible.

Cons

Communication isn't always by official channels. Lots of things through the rumor mill long before leadership admits it. WHO you know and who can vouch for you matters more than your actual skills. Still some remnants of "old boy" network although that may be changing.

1.0
Dec 12, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good benefits; 9/80 work schedule (work 9 hours a day, get every other Friday off).

Cons

Let's face it: GDLS was never a great place to work, but it used to be easy to get used to the random car searches, the endless management fads (quad charts anyone?), and the slow-moving, change-adverse, death-by-meeting culture. These aren't the only problems any more. What was once just a mediocre employer has slowly become a terrible employer. And it's only getting worse. First off, forget about having steady, long-term projects. The company is organized in a feudal fashion, with multiple sections performing the same function in different organizations. This year’s nonsensical re-org just made this worse. Sectional battles over funding are fairly common, and you’ll frequently have to keep a running tally of what you can (and cannot) tell other groups due to inter-departmental cold wars. Unless you’re lucky enough to work for a group that has a constant stream of income, expect to spend part of your time playing salesman to bigger groups - and fighting off the other “guppies.” Should your section run out of work, you’ll be loaned out to a different group, which places you into inter-departmental limbo and can kill your career. However, the biggest problem at GDLS at the moment - and one that seems to get worse week after week - is the excessive micromanagement, reporting, and metrics you’ll be responsible for. The most visible - and loathed - face of this is the omnipresent time card system. You’ll also be expected to publish multiple metrics and reports on your tasks. This gets worse, as you'll frequently have anywhere from 2-3 bosses (more if you’re on loan), each of whom want to take credit for what you're working on and expect your reports in a different format, thus doubling or tripling your report workload. The company also seems to be moving to a "quantitative, not qualitative" review process. It doesn't so much *what* you accomplish; on the other hand, *how many* forms you submit in accordance with your departmental process has a large influence on your review score. Not that it matters much in the long run, as the number of promotions handed out recently seems to been reduced to a trickle. Another quirk of life at GD are the not-uncommon mandatory overtime binges that the company (which gets to charge its customer for your time) uses to pad the bottom line when sales are down. While some employees get paid overtime, it’s locked at $25/hour, a rate which hasn’t changed in decades. You’ll also be forced to work OT regardless of whether or not you’re late on your projects. The current OT binge is also contributing to the low morale at the company, as the only work the company has is being “burnt” at an accelerated rate, and there doesn’t appear to be anything on the horizon to take its place. This usually means layoffs. As expected, the company's IT policies are suitably draconian. You’re forced to use Lotus Notus, which is dreadful piece of software. The company also has Notes set to force-delete your email after a month. They at least warn you now when a mass delete is coming - when they first rolled this out, they silently deleted your email. GDLS also uses Smartfilter to block vast majority of the web, then sticks a cigarette in the wound by adding a custom - and frequently nonsensical - list of blocked sites above and beyond Smartfilter’s. If you try to access a blogspot entry about a particular algorithm, a research paper hosted on a foreign server, or - heaven forbid - parts of National Semiconductor's website (not kidding), you're out of luck. Even the so-called benefits are really just smoke and mirrors. Most people were told upon starting with the company that they had 10+ days of sick/personal. However, in certain groups you will lose points on your performance review if you dare to use more than two of those days. GDLS also claims to offer Flex Time, but their bizarre definition of "Flex Time" means starting at the same time every single day. This spawned a recent corporate crusade is to find and flush out those who aren't starting at their predetermined time, as well as those who don't take their mandatory 45 minute lunch break (no more, no less!) Just remember that your actual experience will vary wildly depending where in the company you wind up. The old-timers will tell you the company frequently goes through periods of protracted awfulness, and now happens to be smack-dab in the middle of one. You may not have many other options for employment in the Detroit area, but you’ll probably want to wait for the company to swing back towards “tolerable” before seeking a job here.

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Glassdoor has 702 General Dynamics Land Systems reviews submitted anonymously by General Dynamics Land Systems employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if General Dynamics Land Systems is right for you.