Great Place To Work - Sr. Electro/Mechanical Designer Xylem Employee Review

5.0
Mar 8, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The job is calm yet busy. Job environment is great, light hearted, fun events and national celebrations make the mood enjoyable. We have plenty of work to do, and reasonable deadlines. Not overpowered by too many meetings. Wages are above average. Good people work here, willing to help if needed. Boss is great, no micromanaging, goal is to help you succeed. It is not common to have to work extra hours.

Cons

They do have strict policy about being in the building before and out after 6PM, including no weekends. This is not helpful if you have something that needs done quickly and extra hours may be called for. However the ability to work from home is there to help in that situation.

Explore other reviews about Xylem

5.0
Jun 6, 2026
Anonymous intern
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Nice managers, supportive, kind environment

Cons

None really, would recommend for internship

1.0
Jun 11, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I observed what appeared to be unequal treatment within several departments, particularly regarding advancement opportunities. In my experience, Black employees seemed to have fewer opportunities for promotion compared to their white peers. I believe the organization would benefit from a review of its promotion and advancement practices to ensure fairness, transparency, and equal opportunity for all employees.

Cons

Leadership should remember that every decision has consequences. As a person of faith, I believe God sees how people are treated, even when others do not. Organizations may be able to justify decisions on spreadsheets and quarterly reports, but there is a higher standard of accountability when it comes to fairness, integrity, and the treatment of employees. When talented people are undervalued, overlooked, or pushed out, the effects eventually reach the business itself. Product lines, innovation, customer satisfaction, and long-term growth are often the first areas impacted when organizations fail to recognize and retain the people who make success possible. Great companies are built by valuing talent, rewarding merit, and treating people with dignity and respect. When those principles are ignored, the consequences eventually become visible. Organizations that fail to recognize and retain talent risk losing the very people who drive innovation, customer success, and long-term growth. Go ahead and continue promoting friends, favorites, and personal relationships over true talent, technical expertise, and proven performance. Time has a way of revealing the consequences of those decisions.

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