Pros
- Empowering Culture: Moog fosters an environment where you’re encouraged to carve your own career path. Initiative is rewarded, and innovation is supported. - Ample Growth Opportunities: Whether you want to deepen your technical expertise or explore new leadership roles, Moog offers numerous avenues for professional development. - Flexible Scheduling: Most IT employees follow a hybrid schedule, typically three days in the office and two from home, providing a healthy work-life balance. - Supportive Time Off Policy: Moog promotes a healthy work/life balance through its "unlimited" time off policy. While not limitless, time off is encouraged and managed collaboratively between you and your manager. - Performance Based Autonomy: Those who demonstrate strong work ethic and results often gain increased flexibility in choosing the projects they work on. - Blame Free Culture: When issues arise, such as system outages, the focus is on resolution, not blame. Teams collaborate effectively under pressure, a refreshing approach. - Every Voice Matters: Employees at all levels are encouraged to speak up, even if their opinions challenge the status quo. Constructive dissent is welcomed. - Collaborative Environment: IT operates through consensus driven decision making and encourages open, honest dialogue across all teams. - Thoughtful Decision Making: While the pace of decision making may be slow at Moog, it allows for deeper reflection and ultimately leads to more strategic, long term outcomes. - Open Door Policy: Executive leadership is approachable. You can have impromptu, and candid conversations with leaders at all levels, regardless of your title or role. - Leadership Cares: Most leaders genuinely care about their people, not just as employees, but as individuals. They support employee's through regular check-ins, flexibility during personal hardships, and celebrating personal milestones. - Career Acceleration: Ambitious employees are given the tools and freedom to grow quickly, take on new responsibilities, and pursue new internal roles. - Cross-Functional Mobility: Moog supports internal career shifts. Employees regularly transition between departments. - Investment in Learning: Education is a priority. In addition to generous tuition reimbursement, leadership often supports certification and encourages continuous learning. - Excellent Benefits: Moog offers health and dental benefits that are among the best in Western New York. The organization also provides substantial retirement contributions, better than any other org I’ve worked for locally. - People First Philosophy: Moog truly values its employees as whole people not just workers. There is a genuine respect for personal time, family commitments, and individual well-being. Managers consistently support flexibility when life events happen, and the culture encourages maintaining a healthy separation between work and personal life.
Cons
- Recognition Without Reward: While Moog emphasizes "Hard Work Should be Rewarded" as a core value, there’s a noticeable gap between recognition and compensation. Employees who consistently go above and beyond often receive the same rewards as those meeting or even falling below expectations. This can be demotivating for high performers seeking meaningful acknowledgment. - Resistance to Change: Despite Moog’s significant investments in R&D and innovation on the engineering front, cultural resistance to change remains prevalent, especially in internal operations and legacy systems. The phrase “This is the way we’ve always done it” is still common, and this mindset poses long term risk to agility and competitiveness. - 'Good Enough': Moog is known for excellence in engineering and motion control, but IT tends to operate with lower expectations and a 'good enough' mentality. There is opportunity to elevate internal standards to better align with the Moog's reputation for excellence. - Selective Enforcement of Hybrid Work Policy: While HR mandates a hybrid schedule of three days in the office and two at home, enforcement varies widely across teams. Some adhere strictly, while others rarely comply. This inconsistency gives perceptions of favoritism and unequal treatment. - Lack of Accountability: In some areas, tasks can fall through the cracks without consequences. When work is delayed or not completed, there is often minimal follow-up or accountability, which frustrate teams who rely on timely execution and collaboration.