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MIT Lincoln Laboratory

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Overrated organization - Anonymous employee MIT Lincoln Laboratory Employee Review

2.0
Nov 22, 2015
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

First and foremost, the benefits are practically unheard of anywhere else. If you are a staff member, there is no strict sick time quota, 401k is matched up to the first 5%, vacation time is accumulated on a monthly basis and doesn't suddenly reset to 0 at the start of the new calendar year like in many other organizations (though you can only accumulate up to a certain amount before you start losing newly accumulated time).

Cons

Bare in mind, I have heard that specific pros/cons can vary significantly across different groups at the lab. With that said, my personal experience has been lacking in a number of different ways. Make no mistake- the lab is not a meritocracy. It's all about who you know, who in upper management likes you, what credentials you have, etc. etc. Perhaps that is not exclusive to the laboratory as an organization, but nonetheless, I feel that it is much worse than in the private sector. Another con that I have personally experienced is a lack of mentoring opportunities. The lab recently started a mentoring program, which has been good from a general career cultivation perspective, but in terms of technical mentoring, there has been a lot to be desired. Related to the point about meritocracy, there is a strong emphasis on academic credentials to the point where advancing within the organization without a PhD or a Master's degree is virtually impossible. This is my biggest gripe, actually. I've met my fair share of PhD's who are vastly unqualified for their positions, and I've also met my fair share of folks with just B.S.'s who are brilliant at the lab. You will rarely, if ever, see someone with only a B.S. positioned above associate staff level at the lab, let alone in a management position. The last con is the ladder ranking system. It's an outdated, often inaccurate representation of how staff members compare to one another performance-wise. If all of your staff are hypothetically performing at an adequate level, using a system of purely relative comparison to weed out the bottom 10% seems silly. Not to mention that one's ladder ranking is often more representative of how much political capital they have than their actual performance. Oh, and the way presentations are done is a joke. I stopped attending seminars (intended for a lab wide technical audience) very soon after being employed due to their inaccessibility. As an outsider, they tend to be very difficult to follow. The lab is very stuck in its ways when it comes to technical presentations, and those ways aren't pretty.

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MIT Lincoln Laboratory Response
10y
Thank you for your comments. WE are pleased that you have found the benefits program to be rewarding. The nature of our work often necessitates an emphasis on current research and developing technologies. Pursuit of an advanced degree can often better enable these skills but it is certainly possible to progress based on experience instead of the degree, although not without a number of challenges. The ladder system is regularly reviewed and altered to be kept current. We will continue to seek to improve it.

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5.0
Jun 3, 2026
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Pros

It can vary a lot from group to group, but in general, wonderful place with wonderful people and lots of interesting work going on. Excellent benefits and lots of flexibility to explore different projects.

Cons

Little opportunity for advancement in terms of rank and compensation once you reach technical staff. Additionally (again varies from group to group) expectations of what a staff member does can be unclear and there can be a light sink-or-swim nature to the work, again depending on the group you're in.

4.0
Jun 17, 2026
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CEO approval
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Pros

Worked with some of the smartest people I’ve ever known. Great opportunities to learn from your coworkers and an atmosphere that encourages learning, including a well-run technical education program. Fabulous support staff and technicians that can get seemingly impossible things done quickly. Great resources and lab spaces (if a bit dated). The nature of the work encourages good work/life balance. Fantastic benefits (though the pay is low).

Cons

No/limited opportunities for advancement makes this a hard place to work mid-career. Good engineers are promoted to be mediocre managers. Every program is under-funded, under-staffed, and over schedule. Bad managers are shuffled around but rarely fired.

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