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No meritocracy at VMware. - Anonymous employee VMware Employee Review

1.0
Apr 10, 2010
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great products loved by customers and partners. Lots of very skilled and accomplished co-workers. If you've been around since the IPO, the options are nice and still vesting. The physical environment is great, beautiful campus in a good location in Palo Alto. Decent flexibility to tele-commute.

Cons

The meritocracy is an absolute joke. But a very un-funny joke. Promotions are very scarce and given for great ass-kissing and power-point skils, not for results. VMware is not a company driven by data and facts. A typical management response to data is to kill the messenger. VMware is still hiring at a fast clip and new people (plus the possy they drag in with them) are given impressive director and VP titles. The people who have been around and built this successful company are not promoted, not rewarded, and seriously underpaid.

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5.0
Jun 24, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

VMware is a big company but in many ways had a startup vibe. That was great because the resources and infrastructure of a big company were there, but it gave most people I worked with freedom to work on many projects, influence, move around, and contribute in many ways. Plus, many things moved faster than they might at other companies of the same size. Perks were really great including bonuses, events on the campus, opportunities, etc.

Cons

The biggest con is the annual layoff. During most of the years I was there, we were growing like crazy, beating expectations, gaining in stock price, etc. It was always positive and upward. However, every single January, it was known that there would be a round of layoffs, even when all numbers were looking great as they almost always were. Management called it restructuring. But, over the years, some really good people were let go for no apparent reason. Then to add insult to injury, a week or two later, there would be a company quarterly meeting discussing how VMware was doing so well and is still hiring, but they had to make some changes. It always felt dishonest and the sympathy for those let go came across as disingenuous.

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