Have low expectations and low self esteem to thrive here - Senior Project Manager/Master Scheduler Unisys Employee Review

1.0
12 May 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Flexible remote work schedule New hires were fantastic to work with

Cons

No raises, not even cost of living in 7 years! No growth. Company can't deliver on current projects and hasn't closed any new ones. Layoffs are rampant. Discovered others were brought in to report to me making $30-40k more and then was told I was overpaid in their "analysis". Was told to quit school (Masters degree) numerous times because "Unisys doesn't require it" and it was interfering with my 100-120 hour work weeks! Note - I was already in school when they hired me. When I graduated, it was a "good, now you can work more", not a "congratulations!" Get yelled at constantly and then told I'm "too sensitive" and "that's just his personality". I was doing nothing wrong, that was just his communication style with everyone, and apparently that's "ok". Some of the other managers are more rude/degrading and we are to take it as "a joke", but it's not funny and quite rude. I finally got someone outside the team that reports to the CEO to listen to our calls and the worst rude/degrading guy was finally reprimanded and moved to another account. This type of treatment seems to be more the rule than the exception across the board. The entire team is treated like second class citizens. Its also definitely a mans world. Worst company I've ever worked for ...

Explore other reviews about Unisys

5.0
27 Jan 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

My boss was great. I was not there long but I felt really bad leaving because having a great boss is rare. I had great work-life balance. I liked what I did. I left because I was offered better salary and healthcare benefits (that I really needed at the time) somewhere else.

Cons

Cons will depend on the team and the team members. Mediocre benefits.

1.0
17 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

If you enjoy mission driven work, the clients are the best part of the job. Many employees are smart, collaborative, and genuinely committed to delivering quality outcomes. The work itself can be meaningful, and there are a few strong individuals who work hard to honor client commitments and carry out contracted deliverables despite internal obstacles.

Cons

Across the last 4+ years, Unisys has experienced consistent leadership failures across nearly every Business Unit (BU). These failures show up in a lack of accountability, unclear direction, and decisions that directly undermine client trust. Employees are often unable to demonstrate or sell the capabilities Unisys markets, including those tied to industry awards because the organization cannot validate or deliver them. The company undergoes employee reductions every 60–90 days, creating instability, eroding institutional knowledge and workloads being consistently shuffled to other already overburdened staffers. In Q1 of 2026, Unisys dismantled its public sector sales team, resulting in the loss of long-standing clients and a steep decline in delivery credibility. A major concern for job seekers is the company’s approach to employee protection. Over multiple years, I personally experienced and am aware of numerous gender, race, and ADA discrimination complaints submitted through the Employee Ethics Portal. Unisys has one individual responsible for reading complaints and conducting interviews, and in each case I witnessed, the situations were left unaddressed. Out of necessity, multiple layers of leadership across different BUs were additionally informed, still no action was taken. Instead of intervening, leadership allowed retaliation to escalate, resulting in financial loss, emotional distress, and professional harm to multiple employees. Advice to Job Seekers: If you are considering Unisys, approach the opportunity with clear expectations. Some employees are talented, and some clients are rewarding, but the environment presents real risks. Employment here requires independence, resilience, and the ability to navigate unclear direction and limited support.

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All