Family - Anonymous employee Banner Engineering Employee Review

4.0
Dec 21, 2017
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Wonderful people! Growing company with a family feel. Flat management style makes it easy to talk to managers.

Cons

Career building is not a priority it's easy to be put in a roll with no clear path to advancement. HR tends to put people into positions rather then post the go through the process of getting the best possible candidate. Pay is usually on the low end until you get to the upper management. Communication between the different departments could use improvement. Stagnate upper management, most upper management positions haven't changed in 20 + years.

Explore other reviews about Banner Engineering

5.0
Apr 28, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good Company and Well Organized

Cons

None, good things happen here

1.0
May 17, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-Air conditioned building. -Computer chairs to sit in during work.

Cons

-Upper management and above is abysmal. I had 6 managers over the course of 3 years of working there. "Organizational change ups", firings and just walking out, seem to happen routinely due to the rot at the top. -Management outright lied about co-workers and my performance in our yearly reviews as an excuse to deem our positions as obsolete and then the company laid us off. -Lots of detrimental policies for lower level employees including the "pay differentials" and will gladly underpay mid level employees while consistently stacking more responsibilities on you. -Non-first shift employees are consistently ignored and disregarded despite most of them having longer tenure then the revolving door of employees on 1st shift. -Company leadership likes to demand mandatory overtime for Electronic Assemblers way too often resulting in slumps of work where they'll "offer" unpaid time off. -Company is also hyper reactive and volatile when trying to meet demand. Including laying off the majority of a third shift when work got slow, to then mass hiring for all shifts nearly doubling low level employees including a weekend shift about a year after cutting the 3rd shift, that has now been dwindled back down to similar employment levels only 8 months later.

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