A great company but sadly promoting incompetence and ineficciency - Anonymous employee Amgen Employee Review

3.0
13 Apr 2016
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Lots of smart and dedicated people, gym on site, beautiful campus, competitive pay, challenging work (not a dull moment) and an opportunity to learn something new nearly every day.

Cons

Top-heavy, incompetent and self-servicing managers are allowed to run areas they have zero background in that makes them insecure, so they lead by fear, eliminate strong subject matter experts who can jeopardize their careers and the whole gravy train arrangement by exposing incompetence and real issues management is not capable of fixing. To secure their position they internally hire clueless employees who will never get hired for the same type of work outside of Amgen, reward them, so they feel forever obliged and provide the most rosy and fabulous feedback to the next level management in the skip-level meetings. Highly bureaucratized processes, tons of questionable and wasteful activities that likely provide job security to those who implemented them, but are extremely painful for others.

Explore other reviews about Amgen

5.0
16 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good benefits for the full-time employees

Cons

Tight deadlines, projects require a lot of approvals to move forward

3.0
24 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Excellent compensation, benefits, and career development opportunities. Strong investment in innovation, patient-focused mission, and world-class manufacturing capabilities. The New Albany site offers exposure to complex biologics operations, large-scale capital projects, and opportunities to work alongside talented and dedicated professionals committed to delivering medicines to patients.

Cons

The culture and leadership experience became increasingly inconsistent during the last year. Decision-making often lacked transparency, priorities shifted frequently, and employee feedback did not always appear to be valued. The people-centered culture that attracted many long-tenured employees seemed to drift, resulting in reduced trust, lower engagement, and increased organizational uncertainty.

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