A solid place to work with fantastic benefits - werkgeversreview Software Development Engineer In Test (SDET) II bij Microsoft

3,0
1 jul 2008
Aanbevelen
Goedkeuring directeur
Zakelijk vooruitzicht

Pluspunten

• The benefits and pay are very good. Healthcare for you and your family is top notch; you won’t find another company with better benefits. This isn’t too important if you are single, but as you begin to raise a family, the healthcare alone with keep you on board! • If you are passionate and work hard and smart, there are plenty of areas for advancement in testing, development, and management. Although you may need to jump teams, projects, or just mangers, you can always find somewhere to grow. • The company promotes employee growth with goals and commitments you are held accountable for each year. They drive you to be your best, and reward you for it. • You are surrounded by some of the sharpest and talented people in the business at every turn. You’ll never stop learning from great people. • The company is big enough for you to move around to different products and fields. You often have your own office (no cube farms!). There is truly something for everyone here. • You get to live in the beautiful Pacific Northwest. Mountains, forests, mild climate (very little humidity). It’s one of the most beautiful areas in the country. • The most amazing R&D in the industry. The research fairs held once a year blow my mind!

Minpunten

• Like many high tech areas, the high cost of living surounding the company can be a drag. There seem to be a large number of retired “Microsofties” in the area. With their cashed out options from the 80s and 90s, the home prices went through the roof. Due to the geography (Lake Washington, Lake Sammamish, hills and mountains), there are fewer places to build homes. As a result, the demand versus the supply is very large. Home prices have stayed relatively high even through this past year’s market downturn. Generally, if you don’t have two full time incomes in your household, you won’t be able to afford a reasonable or nice home; you’ll have to settle for a condo. • Microsoft is always short on employees. This means your will most likely be short of developers and test engineers on your team forcing you to work a little more, and cut or postpone features. Psychologically, this can be a demoralizing, especially when you are excited about and believe in your project. Employees move around often, you can never be sure if you’ll have the workforce the team needs to deliver features for the next version of your product. • Microsoft generally follows the market and will hold off on creating a product until it’s clear there is a large demand and a clear business justification. As a result, we appear like a company of “Jonny come latelys”. Remember Microsoft Terra Server from the late 90’s? Too bad it took Google Earth for Microsoft to realize what a great product this could become. • Even though this is the most ethical, moral and giving company I’ve worked for, Microsoft has the “Evil Empire” stigma. It gets old being approached and castigated by uninformed “lesser minds” that buy into the FUD. • Microsoft creates software for business and industry first, and the consumer second. This is a wonderful business model but at times if feels like you’re creating software for others, and not the software that you’d like to use yourself. There is always another company that needs you to tweak your product so that their 15 year old non-RFC compliant application will work with it. YAWN! • You must have true business justification for ideas and plans you’d like to implement. When you work on your own software in college, you create what you like. But in the industry, you can’t do things that seem “cool” to you. One simply doesn’t say “hey, let’s put a popup stopper in IE!” You’d have to show how it would benefit the bottom line for the company, or wait for another product to implement it and push MS for parity. • Although we have the best R&D, I rarely see management with the forsight to put amazing ideas into our products. Sometimes it reminds me of Xerox in the 70s - Amazing breakthroughs, but the powers that be don’t understand them. 75% of the “innovations” I see at Apple and Google were revealed years before at Microsoft Research fairs. • They still haven’t supplied the company with free Zunes! :-) (Apple employees all received free iPhones!) • Few female engineers. I’m told they were a species hunted to extinction around these parts.

Ontdek andere reviews over Microsoft

5,0
7 jun 2026
Aanbevelen
Goedkeuring directeur
Zakelijk vooruitzicht

Pluspunten

Interesting and varied work. Seasonality to the job allows for rest period

Minpunten

Less stability than there used to be makes people afraid to take risks

4,0
28 jan 2013
Anonieme werknemer
Aanbevelen
Goedkeuring directeur
Zakelijk vooruitzicht

Pluspunten

1. If you love tech, this is a great place. No doubt you'll talk tech (mostly the MSFT stack) from enterprise to consumer - from PCs to phones to Xboxes - from datacenter to desktop. 2. What were GREAT benefits are now VERY GOOD (took a small step down) but still probably better than you'll find at 99% of large corporations. If you've got family - the value of the benefits is even higher. 401k match is nice. 3. Even with it's struggles MSFT is still a cash printing machine. This means if you can keep your nose clean and do reasonable work, you can have a stable job, pay your bills, feed your family, and not worry (too much) about layoffs. The stock you own likely won't tank, but probably won't go up much either. You'll get a bonus each year and some stock. It's a decent life if you aren't looking to light the world on fire.

Minpunten

Brand on Your Resume: After many years of losing market share and struggling to be at the front end of innovation and the fact that there's 90,000 employees, don't think MSFT is necessarily going to be attractive on your resume to more agile and smaller companies. Managing Your Career: Make you say this out loud so it registers - 90,000 employees work there. Double that for vendors. It is VERY hard to "stand out" and move up in the company. Don't expect your manager to be much of an advocate or enabler to help you meet your career goals - they are basically trying to survive the stack rank every year too. Not familiar with the stack rank? Check out the 2012 Vanity Fair article called "Microsoft's Lost Decade".

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