Lack of leadership in business unit means constant chaos. low morale - Anonymous employee Harris Computer Employee Review

2.0
Jun 3, 2023
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Remote work Decent benefits Generous paid time off Harris is not all bad, benefits are decent, paid time off is great and people are friendly. Diversity is not just paid lip service, it is the one value I believe the company actually strives for. Mobility within the corporate structure is possible and even encouraged, if working for such a huge company is your thing. Most of the employees remaining in our business unit are dedicated, good-intentioned people, many of whom have a decade or more invested in the acquired company. They are working harder and harder, as more people leave, to maintain the product. Almost every day is a fire fight.

Cons

In the first year of the pandemic our company was bought by Harris Computer, part of Novum, and a subsidiary of the super massive Canadian Constellation Solutions. From start-up to Borg assimilation. It was clear from the outset that Harris would let key employees, some of them in leadership positions, leave the company and not hire replacements. Leadership vacuums are horrible and are the biggest cause of most of our pain. Harris is a money-driven, bottom-line company, with upper management baldly stating during an all-hands meeting that they'd lay people off before they'd lose money. Innovation at our business unit is no longer a thing, and the idea people have seen that Harris is never going to invest in that sort of forward thinking and have left the company. It is now just a daily slog to keep the product running and the clients happy. It feels like the beginning of a downward spiral, or maybe the middle? In addition, at the time of the acquisition a few key layoffs were made, and several people who were the "meat" of the company were let go while a lot of dead weight employees were retained. This led to a lot more work for those actually doing the work, and a severe morale hit watching the dead weight sit around doing the absolute minimum with exactly zero evidence that management was engaged enough to do anything about it. Remote work has allowed people to exploit the situation. That issue has stagnated for almost three years now leading to employees openly ridiculing management behind their backs. The even bigger problem now is that there is no real leadership over our business unit. A Harris employee came in to "run" the business unit, but it seems to be a part time job, and hit or miss whether he shows up for key meetings, decisions, etc. (He's leaving for another job within the massive corporate structure so it will be interesting to see who replaces him, if anyone). There has been a massive project critical to Harris' goal of reducing costs that has suffered greatly from lack of coherent management. The buck has been passed around to various people as the project misses date after date, and the ultimately has ended up being managed by an ad-hoc committee of well-intentioned technical folks, but with no oversight from upper management to see the reality of the situation, and where the project is at risk. Those in the trenches see it every day. The most puzzling thing about the current situation is that Harris spent a lot of money to acquire our company, and said (at the time) that we were their largest acquisition to date. Do you invest that kind of money in an asset and then watch it wither and die? I guess so as long as it makes a profit today.

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Harris Computer Response
3y
We appreciate you taking the time to provide thorough feedback. Acquisitions (especially those during the heat of the pandemic) have ups and downs as each employee and team travel through the change cycle. We recognize that leadership changes are part of a high growth company but at the same time they can create uncertainty. I will pass along the feedback on a dedicated leader for the business unit. Please continue to provide feedback to your HR business partner and raise concerns as they arise.

Explore other reviews about Harris Computer

5.0
May 28, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great company to work for, though they are all about the next thing to acquire.

Cons

401K plan is a 'maybe we will match' type thing. Could be much better.

3.0
Jun 26, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

It (mostly) pays the bills. Your day to day experience will depend entirely on the business unit you are in and your localized management.

Cons

Compensation is low. Their business model is just continuously acquiring established software companies, gutting them, and rebuilding them according to their model. Standard corporate experience. They will pay you as little as possible to retain you, and do things like changing the structure of HSA contributions to save a buck.

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