Stable job with great perks for those who are happy with subpar work - IT Developer II The Home Depot Employee Review

2.0
22 Jun 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

• Great Benefits: Bi-yearly bonuses starting after 6 months, 401(k) match starting after one year. Decent insurance coverage, discounts on cars • Big résumé padding: Touch lots of different projects that span across the entire world. IT on a mass scale • Decent work life balance: Disconnect after you leave the office. • Free programming classes: I attended basic Java classes that really made a difference

Cons

• Terribly managed IT department: THD is an unbelievably large and bureaucratic business. Orders come from those more concerned about financial goals, not reality. Direct managers are typically helpful, however senior managers are more concerned about political decisions and office contests than getting the actual work done. • Chaos: My team was comprised of 26 contractors (20 of which were offshore in India) and 2 THD associates. We worked closely with more teams in similar fashion. Communication is terrible. Logical decisions are often thrown out the window as defect priorities are shifted by senior management who know nothing about the project. This often caused more frustration in management leading to even more illogical decisions. This problem was so terrible for my team that my project was scrapped and rewritten after I left THD. • Subpar work: Offshore contractors wrote terrible code. Would often walk into work in the morning and pull broken code. Spent most of my time before and after meetings fixing broken code. QA team writes endless defects and has little knowledge about application development. • Office Space in real life: Though I only had around 3 "bosses" at any given time, I was asked when something would be done probably 6 times a day. Often times we would have a meeting in the morning about how urgent something needed to get done, be asked how long it would take, then be forced to attend another meeting directly after. Forced to give estimates on every defect immediately despite working on a high priority defect that the team is under massive pressure about. Forced to use buggy and slow bug tracking software. Inefficiency played out in a catastrophic way. • Endless meetings: I attended over 200 meetings in 6 months, and probably spoke for a total of an hour. • Horrible morale: Contractors and project managers work 60 hour weeks, often staying up until 4 in the morning. Several of my teammates actually had health problems from stress after starting. Because of this, most employees try to shift work to others instead of attack problems themselves • Few opportunities for career advancement: The higher you go in THD, the more meetings you attend and less real work you actually do. You train to become a manager. For developers, this is a nightmare.

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The Home Depot Response
11y
Thank you for your hard work and dedication. We appreciate you taking the time to share your feedback. Although we are unable to comment on your specific experience, we value our associates and understand that our associates are the key to our success. We strive to create an environment where all associates feel they’re respected and that their contributions are valued. Please call 1.866.698.4347 and select the option for the Associate Advice Council Group (AACG) to express your concerns

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5.0
30 Mar 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Mgmt is great, annual raises were sufficient, good work life balance.

Cons

None to be added for now.

5.0
24 Apr 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The Home Depot has a solid moral compass. They aren't about sacrificing their ethics for the sake of a sale, which I love. They also hire a diverse group of people and give a lot back to the community. They offer a lot of benefits and little treats for their employees. Although they push their associates to meet quota, they're realistic about what can and can't be accomplished.

Cons

Home Depot has two different sides to it. Store associates and those of us considered "store support" who are payed by the vendors but work in the stores 100% of the time. I constantly hear about how store associates are stressed out by management and their hours are being rearranged a lot, cut, and they often are stretched thin due to lack of full staffing. "Store support" associates who do merchandising have it better than those who work in specific departments. However, you never really gain knowledge unless you have the time to look things up and read packaging.

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The Home Depot Response
10y
Thank you for taking the time to share your feedback. From the top down, the key to business at The Home Depot is our commitment to not only customer service, but to our associates. Because taking care of associates is one of our core values, we’re always looking for ways to ensure our associates have equal access to growth and development opportunities. We strive to provide an environment where associates feel they’re valued, treated fairly and respected.
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