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Space Systems/Loral Employee Job Reviews in the United States

Browse Space Systems/Loral Reviews by Job Title →

6%
59%
18%
12%
6%
3.4
Average Rating
(based on 17 Space Systems/Loral Review Ratings)

Ratings by Category

Company Culture
3.2
Growth Opportunities
3.2
People You Work With
4.1
Person You Work For
3.4
Rewards You Receive
3.4
Support You Get
3.4
Way You Work
3.6
Work Setting
3.2
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Production Coordinator

"The company has a lot of potential to grow if and only if they are willing to make changes."

Person You Work For 4 / 5 People You Work With 5 / 5 Work Setting 3 / 5
Support You Get 3 / 5 Rewards You Receive 3 / 5 Growth Opportunities 3 / 5
Company Culture 4 / 5 Way You Work 5 / 5
Space Systems/Loral Employee

"There were engineers that literally had to check laptops in/out like library books. Daily stand-up meetings where key stakeholders didn't bother showing up. Refusal to allow standard project management practices could've eliminated consistent lack of accountability, efficiency, and the ability to meet project milestones. PMs encouraged to hide issues that should've been communicated to our customers. Lack of supplier responsibility, and vendor management guidelines. Management quite frequently micromanaged their direct reports by attempting to control whom they work/communicate with, and try to take credit for your work/contributions...bordering on paranoia. There are a few good managers that work there, but also a few managers that aren't above slandering said managers in an effort to gain a more powerful position within the company. Lack of training, and resistance for process improvement will be the reason they'll never be able to retain/attract top talent in Silicon Valley. Anyone who dares to present a fresh/alternative idea will be viciously discredited/attacked with its mere suggestion. Upper management stuck in the past, and clearly incapable of providing strong leadership to stand out in this industry. No clear direction was provided, and employees in constant fear of being laid off."

Person You Work For 1 / 5 People You Work With 1 / 5 Work Setting 1 / 5
Support You Get 1 / 5 Rewards You Receive 1 / 5 Growth Opportunities 1 / 5
Company Culture 1 / 5 Way You Work 1 / 5

Company-Industry Rating Comparison

3.4
Space Systems/Loral (27)

4.8 Highest Rated in this Industry is Harlem Hospital Center (14)
2.2 Lowest Rated in this Industry is Nightingale Home Healthcare (12)
3.7 Average of All Companies in this Industry (10,809)
Space Systems/Loral Employee

"Great place to work. I would recommend it to anyone."

Person You Work For 4 / 5 People You Work With 5 / 5 Work Setting 4 / 5
Support You Get 4 / 5 Rewards You Receive 5 / 5 Growth Opportunities 5 / 5
Company Culture 4 / 5 Way You Work 3 / 5
Senior Manufacturing Engineer

"The aerospace industry in general is slow moving, conservative and low on innovation. However, SSL is all of these things to the extreme. The company culture is one of putting in your time and not rocking the boat. If you want a job where you can come in and do your job without much change every day, this is for you. If you want to innovate or improve things, i would not recommend it."

Person You Work For 3 / 5 People You Work With 4 / 5 Work Setting 1 / 5
Support You Get 2 / 5 Rewards You Receive 4 / 5 Growth Opportunities 2 / 5
Company Culture 2 / 5 Way You Work 2 / 5
Senior Engineering Specialist

"This is one of the premier manufacturers of commercial communications satellites in the world. It has an excellent reputation for its product and its reliability. It recently became a wholly owned subsidiary of MacDonald Dettwiler and Associates. Overall it was an excellent company to work for."

Person You Work For 3 / 5 People You Work With 4 / 5 Work Setting 3 / 5
Support You Get 4 / 5 Rewards You Receive 4 / 5 Growth Opportunities 2 / 5
Company Culture 4 / 5 Way You Work 5 / 5
Senior Security Engineer
Person You Work For 5 / 5 People You Work With 5 / 5 Work Setting 4 / 5
Support You Get 3 / 5 Rewards You Receive 3 / 5 Growth Opportunities 3 / 5
Company Culture 4 / 5 Way You Work 4 / 5
Program Manager

"Yes, the people are the best to work with. I think going into the next 10 years the company needs to apply lean practices and leverage leading edge technologies if they want to remain competitive."

Person You Work For 4.3 / 5 People You Work With 4.3 / 5 Work Setting 4.3 / 5
Support You Get 4.3 / 5 Rewards You Receive 4.3 / 5 Growth Opportunities 4.3 / 5
Company Culture 4.3 / 5 Way You Work 4.3 / 5
Electrical Design Engineer

"I just couldn't tolerate the unethical, political, and negative job environment."

What do you like about working at Space Systems/Loral?

"*You get to work with some interesting satellite hardware and technology.*The compensation and benefits are decent, and engineering salaries are on par with the average numbers for the industry.*They have 401k matching that you can collect only if you stay with the company for five years.*There is a tuition assistance program that allows you to take classes or pursue an advanced degree while working."

Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?

"I would strongly suggest that you keep all the positive reviews of this company in perspective. I hate to say it, but many (but not all) of the employees working at Loral are just average in terms of talent and motivation and are simply happy to have a job. It's not the most intellectually stimulating work environment by any stretch of the imagination. I frequently noticed that most employees were extremely passive and simply did as they were told just to maintain their weekly paycheck. Many employees were completely unwilling to complain about relevant issues or to speak out against unfair company policies and practices simply to keep their jobs secure. Most of the young employees in my group left within a short period of time because they were looking for a more fulfilling job. Management maintains a work environment revolving around fear, mistrust, finger-pointing and discipline rather than positivity and accountability. However, Loral does have potential as an innovative technical company. One would hope that their work environment changes in the future so that they can attract more talented engineers and turn the direction of their company around. If you can be a part of that change, more power to you."

What don't you like about working at Space Systems/Loral?

"*The company culture is absolutely terrible, and no amount of monetary compensation or perks could make up for the horrendous work environment.*There is too much micromanagement; you will most likely have a bad manager who has poor leadership and managerial skills and often behaves like a control freak.*Loral cares nothing about ethical standards; the company often promotes workplace abuse, harassment, and psychological intimidation in order to keep employees in check.*On several occasions, I complained to higher management about a vicious, abusive manager, yet my complaints fell on deaf ears. Higher management kept telling me that You can't choose your manager.*Employees are not treated on an equal level; management consistently tries to shove its power and authority down subordinates' throats just to show them who is the boss, creating an endless cycle of mistrust and finger-pointing.*Managers often behave like secret police just to track and monitor employees, and to be ready to discipline you in case you showed up to work a little late or were briefly checking your email on your work computer.*The lack of ethical standards at Loral translates into the engineering work itself. For example, sometimes employees are instructed to lie or give misleading information on non-conformance reports just to pass potentially faulty hardware through. Loral will stop at nothing to save every penny that it can and pass every piece of flight hardware through its testing process.*There is a significant amount of dishonesty exhibited by the managers. For example, I once sat in a staff meeting where we were discussing a new piece of hardware that we were developing for R&D. A senior engineer informed us that a foreign space agency had already built, tested, and flown that product into space. However, the manager sitting at the table blatantly lied to us and told us that no such thing has happened, just to prevent employees from losing morale. Do you think it makes sense if Samsung lies to its Galaxy smartphone engineers and says that No, no, Apple hasn't come up with an iPhone 5 yet, it's not true Go figure.*This dishonesty is extremely prevalent, even during the hiring process. Several young engineers in my group were hired on the premise of a design position, yet were basically forced to be grunt workers doing a pathetic manufacturing support job.*The company environment is just too political. You will waste half of your time finger-pointing and playing the blame game, as well as avoiding the wrath of vicious and abusive managers.*There is virtually no design or innovation here, making it difficult to truly work in the engineering field that you wanted to. As an engineer, most of your time will be spent doing production/manufacturing grunt work, such as data review, supervising test engineers on the production floor, writing tedious and repetitive non-conformance reports, etc. The company simply doesn't have the money to hire dedicated production engineers, so other engineers are forced to do this work most of the time. *Additionally, there is simply too much paranoia over flight qualification and test procedures, and not enough knowledge of how to innovate or create value out of something new.*Moreover, there is almost no flexibility in work hours. The company is just too nit-picky over your work hours and will often discipline you for tardiness even though you may still be efficiently getting your work done. They are just too old-school and do not understand the nature of a flexible and results-oriented work environment that other companies exhibit.*Work days are oftentimes boring because the company just fails to generate good business and consistently win satellite contracts. Many employees waste time and try to work on their own schedules because there just isn't that much work to do. When there is work, it's really not that interesting or challenging at all.*Much of the company is in shabby condition. Very little money is spent to improve common things like the bathrooms, water fountains, etc. Even the IT infrastructure consists of old, slow and inefficient software tools to manage data. Important test data for satellite hardware is stored in binders that you need to personally go and dig up as if you're fetching something from your garage."

What suggestions do you have for management?

"Please try to change your company culture to fit with a more positive work environment. It will help you retain talented employees rather than hiring one- or two-year rentals.Additionally, try to create a more flexible work schedule for employees. Stop living in the '60s and bring yourself back to the reality of modern silicon valley. Just because some baby boomers and other people of older generations worked endless hours per day and had no lives outside of work, doesn't mean it has to be that way now. We have new technology today that makes certain tasks quicker and more efficient than they were 20 or 30 years ago. What you fail to realize is, if there is enough work to do, then the work hours will take care of themselves. If you are winning enough satellite contracts, then people will work their hours and maybe even some overtime hours. You don't need to monitor and scrutinize employees just for opportunities to discipline. If the work is getting done, then DON'T nitpick. If the work isn't getting done, hold an employee accountable and make them understand the negative impact they are having on the organization, but in a positive manner. Using discipline and negative methods like performance improvement plans are just pathetic tools used to target and alienate certain employees. Cut out the micromanaging nonsense and give employees more leeway to think creatively and work on their projects independently without creepy managers breathing down their neck all the time.Also, you should try to support more innovation so that employees have variety in their work. Your company has no idea of how to innovate or create new products; you just rely on the low-risk, low-reward method of recycling old hardware. Eventually, this will stop paying off and you will need to create something new. Otherwise, if this is the path you choose, then don't hire engineers for design positions. When the focal point of a job is simply production/manufacturing grunt work, then I'm afraid it's just NOT a design job. Make it known during the interview exactly what you are looking for, instead of hiring employees with a deceptive premise and giving them a surprise afterwards.Also, I would suggest trying to improve the general company infrastructure. This includes, but is not limited to IT, common break room provisions, and engineering test data. It seems like everything could use a bit of renovation."

Person You Work For 1 / 5 People You Work With 2 / 5 Work Setting 1 / 5
Support You Get 1 / 5 Rewards You Receive 3 / 5 Growth Opportunities 2 / 5
Company Culture 1 / 5 Way You Work 2 / 5
Support Operations Manager

"Very political environment, slow to change."

What do you like about working at Space Systems/Loral?

"Good pay, vacation, and coworkers. Overall, the benefits were good."

Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?

"If you do not want to do anything new, but just sit at your desk and do what you are told, then go for it. But if you actually want to have new ideas and implement them, this company is not for you."

What don't you like about working at Space Systems/Loral?

"It was well understood that friends of the president got their way, whether it made sense or not. As a result, having a rational discussion about ideas was out of the question just because certain people would never go for that."

What suggestions do you have for management?

"First, change the president. Then, change the mentality that who proposes an idea is more important than the merits of the idea itself."

Person You Work For 2 / 5 People You Work With 4 / 5 Work Setting 4 / 5
Support You Get 3 / 5 Rewards You Receive 2 / 5 Growth Opportunities 3 / 5
Company Culture 1 / 5 Way You Work 1 / 5
Lead BTE Development Engineer

"Extremely skilled at software development on many platforms and languages."

What do you like about working at Space Systems/Loral?

"Continued development of new systems and products required new testers that were of increasing complexity. Challenging."

Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?

"Expect to support existing designs and new development will be allocated to senior engineers."

What don't you like about working at Space Systems/Loral?

"Slowdown in current market and not government programs made continued work questionable."

What suggestions do you have for management?

"Management is too top heavy and too many intermediate levels have been added."

Person You Work For 4 / 5 People You Work With 5 / 5 Work Setting 3 / 5
Support You Get 4 / 5 Rewards You Receive 4 / 5 Growth Opportunities 3 / 5
Company Culture 3 / 5 Way You Work 5 / 5
Composite Technician

"Great experience"

What do you like about working at Space Systems/Loral?

"Everything- everyone will stop what thay are doing to help you complete a project."

Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?

"Make sure that your appearance is neat and clean and show up early for the interview."

What don't you like about working at Space Systems/Loral?

"Nothing- read the comments on what I like about SSL."

What suggestions do you have for management?

"None- management was very helpful when I had any problems."

Person You Work For 5 / 5 People You Work With 5 / 5 Work Setting 5 / 5
Support You Get 5 / 5 Rewards You Receive 5 / 5 Growth Opportunities 5 / 5
Company Culture 5 / 5 Way You Work 5 / 5
Senior Sales Engineer
Person You Work For 4.9 / 5 People You Work With 4.9 / 5 Work Setting 3 / 5
Support You Get 4.9 / 5 Rewards You Receive 3 / 5 Growth Opportunities 4.9 / 5
Company Culture 5 / 5 Way You Work 5 / 5
Intern
Person You Work For 5 / 5 People You Work With 5 / 5 Work Setting 5 / 5
Support You Get 5 / 5 Rewards You Receive 3 / 5 Growth Opportunities 3 / 5
Company Culture 4 / 5 Way You Work 5 / 5
Engineering Specialist
Person You Work For 1.1 / 5 People You Work With 3.1 / 5 Work Setting 2.9 / 5
Support You Get 2.6 / 5 Rewards You Receive 2.5 / 5 Growth Opportunities 2.6 / 5
Company Culture 1.5 / 5 Way You Work 1.4 / 5
Senior RF Engineer
Person You Work For 3 / 5 People You Work With 4 / 5 Work Setting 3.1 / 5
Support You Get 3.1 / 5 Rewards You Receive 3.1 / 5 Growth Opportunities 3 / 5
Company Culture 3.1 / 5 Way You Work 3.9 / 5

Space Systems/Loral Reviews FAQs

Is Space Systems/Loral a good company to work for?

Space Systems/Loral has an overall rating of 3.4 Average Rating out of 5, based on over 17 Space Systems/Loral Review Ratings left anonymously by Space Systems/Loral employees, which is 13% lower than the average rating for all companies on CareerBliss. 82% of employees would recommend working at Space Systems/Loral.

Does Space Systems/Loral pay their employees well?

Space Systems/Loral employees earn $71,000 annually on average, or $34 per hour, which is 8% higher than the national salary average of $66,000 per year. 7 Space Systems/Loral employees have shared their salaries on CareerBliss. Find Space Systems/Loral Salaries by Job Title.

How satisfied are employees working at Space Systems/Loral?

82% of employees would recommend working at Space Systems/Loral with the overall rating of 3.4 out of 5. Employees also rated Space Systems/Loral 3.2 out of 5 for Company Culture, 3.4 for Rewards You Receive, 3.2 for Growth Opportunities and 3.4 for support you get.

What is the highest paying job at Space Systems/Loral?

According to our data, the highest paying job at Space Systems/Loral is a President at $400,000 annually. Browse Space Systems/Loral Salaries by Job Profile.

What is the lowest paying job at Space Systems/Loral?

According to our data, the lowest paying job at Space Systems/Loral is a Graduate Research Assistant at $23,000 annually. Browse Space Systems/Loral Salaries by Job Profile.

What are the pros and cons of working at Space Systems/Loral?

According to reviews on CareerBliss, employees commonly rated the pros of working at Space Systems/Loral to be Company Culture, Growth Opportunities, People You Work With and Person You Work For, and no cons.

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