Pluspunten
IBM is a wonderful place to build a foundation for your career. There are loads of educational opportunities offered, including internal courses / curricula and external education funding. It is also easier to explore a new career opportunity within IBM, since the company is quite large and has so many roles that need to be filled. The absolute best aspect of working at IBM, though, at least in my product development area, is the quality of your colleagues. You truly are surrounded by some of the brightest, most creative and driven people in the world of technology, and that pride shows through, even in the face of poor management. Finally, the benefits, especially work/life flexibility, are very good. Work-at-home is now widely accepted, and remote teams are the norm. Vacation time is only loosely tracked, and the general attitude is that as long as you get your work done and are available for necessary meetings, you are free to take time off or work flexible hours. I also believe IBM is a great place for women and minorities to succeed -- as a woman, I have never once felt I was being treated differently than my male colleagues, and the company has a plethora of diversity groups and communities for all employees to join.
Minpunten
Management, management, management. Oh yes - and bureaucracy rivaling the US Government. Your experience at IBM is 90% dependent upon how good your first-line manager is....if you have a strong, supportive manager, you'll be happy, but if you have a weak one, you're doomed to be miserable. Luckily, most first-line managers are pretty good, but they have the most thankless job in the entire company because they get it from both sides. Their departments are continually squeezed by upper management, but they are powerless to do anything about it, so they have to hear the complaining from below. Lower management has no REAL control over compensation; it's all determined in the stratosphere of executive management. Executive management at IBM, in my opinion, has degraded to ABYSMAL. I now truly believe our Senior Management flat-out LIES to us about compensation, job outsourcing, and other difficult issues. Instead of leveling with employees, they spout all sorts of sunny platitudes ("no job added in India or China is eliminating a job in the US") that we all know, from personal experience, are NOT TRUE. IBM has also become far too top-heavy, with far too many VPs running around and very little real control at the lower levels of management. We in product development cannot even travel on business without VP approval! Many of us now also believe that only those who suck up to Senior Management get the recognition and promotions available in the management ranks (technology promotions seem to be more performance-based and fair). Those who speak truth to power are often not rewarded for it. Finally, the bureaucracy inherent in an enterprise the size of IBM is frustrating, to say the least. Simple tasks, like acquiring necessary test equipment for our software releases, involve quarter-long review, negotiation, and approval processes that waste time and put programs at risk. *Finance* truly has the control over IBM -- not technology.