CIRRUS ROCKS! - Analyst Cirrus Logic Employee Review

5.0
9 Mar 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Our culture is AMAZING. I have never loved working for a company more. There is a lot of support for upward growth without supervisors feeling insecure about you increasing your skillset. I was hired on with limited knowledge and taught a lot of on the job training which has been really rewarding. The benefits are excellent and they provide company sponsored healthcare, PTO, discounts for childcare and subsidies for family care, parental leave, surrogacy and adoption assistance programs, fertility coverage, on-site fitness facilities, and mental health support. We have groups that help younger professionals find mentorship at Cirrus and pay for memberships for us to be apart of other professional working groups in Austin. I am apart of the Women’s Leadership Team and I am in many PODs that help foster growth and facilitate tough professional development conversations. Other fun perks are happy hours on Thursday or Friday that usually have a theme or charity and a Lyft credit for the entire night after so you can have a free safe ride home. There are free vending machines in every major building and huge free snack areas on every floor.

Cons

We are still in the office 2 days a week. This is necessary for my role, but not for all roles.

Explore other reviews about Cirrus Logic

5.0
29 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Excellent work environment. Good perks. Interesting and exiting projects.

Cons

Needs to work on improving processes, some departments still run in excel / sharedpoint

3.0
17 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The company has strong technical products and many talented engineers. There are opportunities to work on meaningful engineering and verification challenges, and I had positive technical collaborations with several strong engineers.

Cons

Employee experience can vary significantly depending on local management. In my experience, feedback and escalation did not always feel transparent or actionable. I would encourage future employees to pay close attention to how expectations, performance concerns, and speak-up issues are handled in practice. Company culture should not be judged only by perks, free food, snacks, or friendly messaging. Core values like ethics, integrity, and speaking up are truly tested during difficult situations — when there is conflict, disagreement, or concerns raised about management behavior. That is when employees see whether values are truly lived or mostly written on paper. I would also be thoughtful about employee surveys. Even when surveys are described as anonymous, discussing results openly at a small-group or team level can make employees question whether their feedback is truly protected. If people feel comments can be traced back to a small group, they may stop being honest.

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