Texas Instruments Engineer reviews

3.0

41% would recommend to a friend

(127 total reviews)
avatar

Haviv Ilan

33% approve of CEO

39% positive business outlook

Engineer employees have rated Texas Instruments with 3.0 out of 5 stars, based on 127 company reviews on Glassdoor. This indicates that most Engineer professionals have an average working experience there. Texas Instruments is rated in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) by Engineer professionals compared to other employers within the Produktion industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

127 reviews
1.0
May 27, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There was a good body of knowledge within O&M/Engineering Beautiful Location Lots of potential

Cons

TI bought LFAB and it became clear that legacy management was incompetent and incapable of improving. Engineering Management had been running the site into the ground for decades, many fled before the eventual massive round of layoffs, others stuck around and bowed out of their roles "voluntarily" into lower management roles. No real desire to improve the site due to financials as the company over-invested in LFAB2, while implementing absurd design "strategies" that reduced safety and amounted to corner cutting for "cost savings". TI took government money via CHIPS Act and proceeded to layoff ~200-400 employees. So much for all of those "values".

3.0
May 22, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good work life balance and benefits

Cons

Hard to feel really motivated about what we do. Making a product that already exists just to make TI more money

1.0
Apr 26, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Ok pay, Great environment for learning (ideal for new hires)

Cons

Where do I even begin? This place operates like an exclusive club—if you're not playing the political game you can forget about any promotion, no matter how hard you work or how qualified you are. Leadership is a joke. They're incompetent, constantly asking irrelevant questions, completely incapable of articulating any real vision. All they do is slap on short-term fixes and try to keep things running without spending a dime on real planning or long-term solutions. They are understaffed, yet somehow expected to work beyond regular business hours—with zero incentives for training or professional growth. Their brilliant “plan” is to dump all the training responsibilities on senior staff, piling on more stress and making it impossible for them to get their actual work done. This isn't a workplace—it's a mess being held together by burnt-out employees and clueless management.

Viewing 10 - 12 of 127 Reviews

Glassdoor has 7,381 Texas Instruments reviews submitted anonymously by Texas Instruments employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Texas Instruments is right for you.