Ethicon Reviews

4.0

41% would recommend to a friend

(379 total reviews)
avatar

Alex Gorsky

78% approve of CEO

36% positive business outlook

Ethicon has an employee rating of 4.0 out of 5 stars, based on 379 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Ethicon employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Manufacturing industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

379 reviews
2.0
23 Apr 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The company provides a great benefits package, including a full Pension (if they don't "eliminate your position") before you turn 55. There are a lot of talented people in this company. You will learn a lot, which will position you for your next company. They provide annual salary bumps.

Cons

It's not what you know, but who you know and how good of a salesman you are (you need to constantly be selling yourself). Working late or through lunch won't get you anywhere. You need to network- a.k.a. Kiss a lot of "tail" with other people in your own department and others. Go out to lunch with others who are your senior. Tell them what you are working on and ask them for their advice. They also have a very inconsistent promotion policy. They generally do not promote anyone. When you become eligible for the next level through "succession planning" (all of the people whose but you kissed say how great you are), then you need to apply for positions at the next level and interview for them. You could work for three years to get promotable and then spend then next two years trying to get it! Also, you could be winning awards one day and find your role eliminated the next day. There is no job security. The company has been consolidating positions for the last 5 years. There are VPs and prior company presidents interviewing for Director roles- it all flows downhill, resulting in fewer opportunities for advancement (let alone keeping your job). Because the company is growing very little, management has not paid full bonuses in the last 3-4 years. E.g. If you have a target bonus of 15% expect to get 12%, even if you fully meet your objectives. Lastly, the company is very focused on diversity- so much so that they actually state that they may exclude certain individuals from even interviewing based on diversity considerations.

1.0
19 Jun 2018

Exclusionary

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Strong Brand recognition among customers

Cons

Focus is only on getting work done - the what vs building a team spirit, focus on customers, employees etc like the credo says. When convenient they flaunt the credo on your face but act as if only the last paragraph on stakeholders is what matters. Company hasn’t innovated in years and business results reflect that. So how do they react, by firing a bunch of people indiscriminately without any rationale or plan to carry the work or hire some employees back. For a company that prides on its D&I efforts the behavior of it’s people leaders is extremely shameful. They practice and exercise biases every day and judge people every hour.

2.0
4 Feb 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Strong company name recognition. Great benefits. Some good people. Rarely encounter urgency. This is a good place for people right out of college who haven’t worked for other companies or for people with kids who need lots of time off.

Cons

Compensation structure- THE FIRST YEAR IT IS VIRTUALLY IMPOSSIBLE TO GET PAID THE AT PLAN AMOUNT – NOT POSSIBLE. The second year you’ll feel like you were made whole, purely because you are getting paid money owed to year in year one (your Q4 commissions and 30% “How” money). I’ll try to summarize the 20 page document that is needed to figure out pay. First, what they don’t disclose in the employment contract is 30% of your commission is held and not paid out until March of the following year. If you leave before Dec 31, you forfeit the money. In addition, this compensation, called your “HOW”, is completely subjective and based on things that have no impact on your sales quota. These things include setting up a charity event for your peers, participating in extra curricular activities, agreeing to do something unreasonable in fear your manager won’t think you deserve your full compensation. Added to this, how much you actually get paid is determined by all of the regions managers getting together and fighting out what rep gets what pay. It’s all determined on a bell shaped curve, so not everyone can get the full pay, and even if you are well above quota, you might not get what you deserve. This has ZERO place in a sales job and makes for a lot of back stabbing, fakeness, doing things you have no interest in for all the wrong reasons. Did I mention marketing controls sales? Yes, marketing sets sales quotas and pretty much calls the shots. Huh? Advancement- In the interview you hear a ton about advancement. What is not mentioned is how this works. Quickly, lets say you are interested in being a sales manager. You are a sales rep for a number of years (7-10). The only way to move up is to take a job in marketing or sales training (and most require moving to Cincinnati or New Jersey) for 2 years. As a result, the company is filled with marketing and trainers who have no interest in those positions and are just counting down the days until they can move out. Sadly, this greatly affects the quality of both roles. New hires beware: your training will be sub par. Diversity- The company has lots of clubs for various people. They try to hire a wide range of employees, whether good fits or not. And although there is a lot of diversity on the outside, they really don’t embrace individualism. The company honestly just wants a group of robotic clones. They want you to say exactly the same thing, in the same order as they’ve instructed. I’m not talking about being compliant and only stating things as indicated, this is very different, but you’ll quickly recognize it after being in a number of meetings and interviews. For instance, regional management isn’t even allowed to structure their annual meetings as they see fit. They are confined to something called “meeting in a box” where they are sent videos, agendas, scripts as to exactly how and what is presented during the meetings. It’s down right insulting to the reps and managers and doesn’t promote a good exchange of dialog and learning. Basically, the company expects sales but has little respect for the sales force. The job- The job really isn’t sales, if you are a professional sales person. It’s customer service/account management. You can’t make much of a difference. Most is controlled by contracts. You’re there to answer questions, in service, try to get new products into the accounts, keep competitors away. Very little is needed by the hospital and doctors. I actually have a hard time believing most of these jobs are necessary. You’ll be searching for things to keep busy every day and for the full day.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 379 Reviews

Glassdoor has 560 Ethicon reviews submitted anonymously by Ethicon employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Ethicon is right for you.