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Allison Transmission

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Werkomgeving - Anonymous employee Allison Transmission Employee Review

4.0
10 Mar 2019
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Veel vrijheid en goede werksfeer

Cons

Als Amerikaans bedrijf wordt er niet altijd met Nederlandse gebruiken/verwachtingen rekening gehouden.

Explore other reviews about Allison Transmission

5.0
8 May 2026
Anonymous contractor
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good work environment Excellent learning opportunity

Cons

Management is not good , sometimes you might be stuck in limbo Not very good benefits

2.0
12 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Allison is a small enough company that, if you are somehow trusted to take ownership of any work, you can make a meaningful difference. Decent compensation including bonuses, at least up until the Dana acquisition.

Cons

Unfortunately I really wanted to like working here. However, the culture really made it difficult. - Very, VERY non-trusting of employees and even managers/directors. This culture manifested as the hilariously complicated and restrictive "flexible" work policy, where not even directors were trusted to hold their employees accountable to get work done on a hybrid schedule. - It also manifested and as a very inefficient way to get work done and allocate tasks. Mid-level employees - not to mention junior engineers - were not trusted to take ownership of tasks. As a result, I feel like my skillset and my general working confidence stagnated or even atrophied during the time I was at Allison. At one point I, a senior engineer, had very little work to do while my supervisor took lead on a change request (as a software developer, not just a tech lead). I learned later that this was at the behest of his boss (my manager) because it was "too important" for regular engineers like me to own, even though I had >10 years of experience at the time. - To that end, it felt like a "boys' club" at times. If you came in as a new employee, even with years (or a decade+) of experience, it didn't matter. Oftentimes junior and senior engineers would have very little work to do while tech experts, who were supposed to consult and mentor, would have a high workload owning day-to-day software tasks. - Extremely regressive culture when it comes to tech and innovation. It's okay to be cautious, but driving any change that's not "the way it's always been done" was a monumental task every time. It was very tiresome and made what should be interesting and innovative projects needlessly difficult. Part of this comes with the territory with commercial automotive, but I still feel like Allison's trepidation and resistance to develop will hurt them in the long run.

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