"I wanted to do technical work, but I'm being pushed towards product-movement."
What do you like about working at Texas Instruments?
"Salary for senior people."
Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?
"Ask about technical vs. business responsibilities. If you like business focus, you might like TI."
What don't you like about working at Texas Instruments?
"Oppressive focus on moving product. I would rather do technical work."
What suggestions do you have for management?
"Lighten up. Let people do what they do best. Manage it to generate ROI."
"The current direction of the company is worrying me."
What do you like about working at Texas Instruments?
"I like the potential for travel around the world and the chance to broaden my skills."
Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?
"Be honest and open about your experience, knowledge and capabilities."
What don't you like about working at Texas Instruments?
"The current direction of the company is souring the work place."
What suggestions do you have for management?
"They need to plan new devices and technology for the future and not current market."
"Product development engineer with the Storage Products Group. Good experience!"
What do you like about working at Texas Instruments?
"Very broad product portfolio, diverse people and generous with its employees."
Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?
"Prepare well for your interview by refreshing on the skills for the position and give all your heart; the company is worth it."
What don't you like about working at Texas Instruments?
"There was a bit of internal competition among collaborating groups."
What suggestions do you have for management?
"I would recommend that management grow their collaboration among their teams."
What do you like about working at Texas Instruments?
"The opportunity to grow in a reliable company as is Texas Instruments"
Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?
"Not only with this company, but for life: always enjoy what you do and try to learn whatever you can."
What don't you like about working at Texas Instruments?
"Right now, I'm a contractor, not an employee. I look forward to be employed."
What suggestions do you have for management?
"I think more is more: if we have more places to sell, more sales we're getting."
What do you like about working at Texas Instruments?
"Low-level technology."
Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?
"Be technical and nerdy."
What don't you like about working at Texas Instruments?
"Old ways of engineering."
What suggestions do you have for management?
"Create an engineering process."
What do you like about working at Texas Instruments?
"I like the teamwork environment that Texas Instruments has, and also my work area."
What don't you like about working at Texas Instruments?
"There has been a recent consolidation of wireless at Texas Instrument that I do not like."
What suggestions do you have for management?
"I think they should look into all aspects of the business and not only look deeply at analog."
What do you like about working at Texas Instruments?
"Technology, environment, friendly and experienced team, team work."
Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?
"Not really, just good luck. After all it is a good company and very well organized."
What don't you like about working at Texas Instruments?
"Isolation from the management, considerations future planing to gain DIN."
What suggestions do you have for management?
"Flexibility, open minded, consideration, open doors concepts, mutual understanding."
What do you like about working at Texas Instruments?
"Great to have on resume but an awful job. Working in the fab is absolutely draining."
Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?
"Be confident and make sure you have a good understanding of the position."
What don't you like about working at Texas Instruments?
"Being a process engineer is simply overseeing a process, no real science seems to come in play often. They sell you on being a fab engineer as being innovative and exciting, but it's mundane and exhausting. It's a lot of the same things day in day out, and it is certainly not for everyone. Working with manufacturing you constantly get bogged down with complaints. There is no real training, you don't gain knowledge until something goes wrong with the process you're over."
What suggestions do you have for management?
"As a manager I would focus on my new hires more to help develop them. You can't expect new hires to learn and grow without any actual training. Managers need to help guide training directly instead of pushing them off on their team members without notice or direction."
"I liked my peers. I did not like commuting to Redmond and developing for WinRT."
What do you like about working at Texas Instruments?
"Designing and writing OMAP drivers. Working with excellent peers. Decent pay."
Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?
"Just do your best to honestly match yourself to the qualifications of the job."
What don't you like about working at Texas Instruments?
"Working on WinRT. Being blocked by MSFT because their engineers had to work between getting their own work done and helping folks like us."
What suggestions do you have for management?
"Good luck and best wishes. It was an amazing two years."
What do you like about working at Texas Instruments?
"Look forward to learn new things and like to solve problems."
Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?
"Be honest on what you think and tell exactly what's on your mind."
What don't you like about working at Texas Instruments?
"Hate to deal with work politics and stay late at work."
What suggestions do you have for management?
"Management needs to be fair and judge employees on how they perform."
"TI is a great company to work for due to the work life balance."
What do you like about working at Texas Instruments?
"The work culture and the technologies that we are working on."
Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?
"Make sure that you interview with groups that have good growth opportunities."
What don't you like about working at Texas Instruments?
"High level decision making that has badly affected a huge business that was at the top of its business line to being out of market."
What suggestions do you have for management?
"Make the execution of the plans and decisions a top priority rather than on paper implementations."
What do you like about working at Texas Instruments?
"I am constantly part of innovation and latest technologies. There is constant learning and growth."
Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?
"Texas Instruments is one of the best companies to work for."
What don't you like about working at Texas Instruments?
"There is nothing I don't like about the company."
What suggestions do you have for management?
"Continue the good work you are already doing. I wish you the best."
What do you like about working at Texas Instruments?
"I enjoyed working with the FA people especially because of their advanced FA knowledge."
Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?
"The people are great here, try and relax and just feel comfortable explaining your experience."
What don't you like about working at Texas Instruments?
"Too much micro-managing by my supervisor and his supervisor. Let the engineers do their job."
What suggestions do you have for management?
"Let the engineers do what they were schooled and trained for, let them work on current projects using their acquired skills."
"Good place to work. Good work hours. Flexible management. Good benefits."
What do you like about working at Texas Instruments?
"Flexible with hours. Fair pay. Security. Values educations and creativity."
Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?
"TI values integrity in their personnel. I recommend honest answers and a lack of exaggeration of skills. Creativity is also valued. When you don't know the answer to a question, and there will be at least one in your interview, demonstrate the process you would use to get that knowledge."
What don't you like about working at Texas Instruments?
"Poor execution of strategic objectives. Lack of investment in IT services."
What suggestions do you have for management?
"Grow analog business since it has been the objective for years. Build a modern information distribution strategy on web services enabling more cross organizational interaction."
"Quiet and laid back."
What do you like about working at Texas Instruments?
"Very laid back but structured. Always have to be on time with projects and paperwork"
Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?
"I would advise them to ask a lot of questions."
What don't you like about working at Texas Instruments?
"A lot of programs that do the same thing. No consolidation of data or information."
What suggestions do you have for management?
"I would suggest that they rethink all the process that is implemented. There are a lot of them that can be merged."
Texas Instruments has an overall rating of 4.2 Average Rating out of 5, based on over 149 Texas Instruments Review Ratings left anonymously by Texas Instruments employees, which is 8% higher than the average rating for all companies on CareerBliss. 97% of employees would recommend working at Texas Instruments.
Texas Instruments employees earn $75,000 annually on average, or $36 per hour, which is 14% higher than the national salary average of $66,000 per year. 54 Texas Instruments employees have shared their salaries on CareerBliss. Find Texas Instruments Salaries by Job Title.
97% of employees would recommend working at Texas Instruments with the overall rating of 4.2 out of 5. Employees also rated Texas Instruments 4.2 out of 5 for Company Culture, 4.1 for Rewards You Receive, 3.8 for Growth Opportunities and 4.3 for support you get.
According to our data, the highest paying job at Texas Instruments is a Director of New Business Opportunities at $191,000 annually. Browse Texas Instruments Salaries by Job Profile.
According to our data, the lowest paying job at Texas Instruments is a Material Control Analyst at $20,000 annually. Browse Texas Instruments Salaries by Job Profile.
According to reviews on CareerBliss, employees commonly rated the pros of working at Texas Instruments to be Company Culture, Growth Opportunities, People You Work With and Person You Work For, and no cons.
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