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Harley-Davidson, Inc.

Engaged Employer

Harley-Davidson, Inc. reviews

3.2

43% would recommend to a friend

(1,443 total reviews)
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Artie Starrs

39% approve of CEO

30% positive business outlook

Harley-Davidson, Inc. has an employee rating of 3.2 out of 5 stars, based on 1,443 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Harley-Davidson, Inc. 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

1K reviews
2.0
May 3, 2016

Fathers of Anarchy

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You have exposure to the best customers anywhere on earth. Their passion for H-D can help sustain you when things are not good. Many great, ethical employees who really “get it.” There are a precious few top leaders left who know the business, are collaborative, humble and constructive. The motorcycles are excellent and you can truly be proud of them. The product development people are top notch and get very little credit for the success of Harley. Read below…marketing gets credit for everything good that happens.

Cons

If I wanted to send H-D into decline, I’d start by a personnel environment where far too many people get “exceeds expectations” on their annual reviews. I’d make sure to move people from one job into another job they have no business doing. I wouldn’t move the incompetent out of H-D, I’d move them around. I’d pay my people too little while admonishing them “You get to work for Harley,” as if they could pay their mortgage with that. As a leader, I’d respond to any questions or pleas for help defensively. I’d play favorites openly…because what are you going to do about it? I’d promote my friend every 18 months and barely talk to the rest. I’d work year in and year out without a long term strategy. Jumping from harried tactic to harried tactic is easier on me, and it’s also kind of fun. It makes me feel creative. I'd throw impossible expectations on people and end it with the "One Team, One Company!" mantra. After all, I don't have to do the work, you do. I’d push “project management” but not hold the leadership accountable when they waste a department’s time on their own subjective whims. I’d bring in a bunch of egomaniacs from General Motors (that bastion of excellence) and give them cart blanch. I’d reward leaders who waste millions of dollars and staff hours on poorly formed ideas and then pull the plug just before its done. I’d take dwindling or stagnant monetary resources and spread them across an ever-rising number of marketing programs and initiatives. More is always better. I’d worry only about shareholder value as quality issues multiply and customer satisfaction drops. I’d make sure ALL of the credit goes to narcissistic marketing leaders while everyone else is told to keep quiet. I’d rest on the laurels of what Harley was 20 years ago when it had no domestic competition. I’d try to explain away how Polaris bought a dead brand and is beating Harley over the head with it. But then, someone got a head start on me.

1.0
Aug 4, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

If you like to work on CAD drawings all day with unrealistic deadlines and dealing with management direction change on a daily basis then this is the place for you.

Cons

The engineering work environment at the PDC is high stress and the amount of people churn is unbelievable. It is rare that a project will finish with at least 25% of the the original team members that started on it. Forget about performance reviews as it is not uncommon to be shuffled around like a deck of cards and work under different manager over the course of a year that have no clue of your skill set, experiences or prior achievements. Management has no clear direction except time lines and it is not uncommon to get an email at 2:00pm requesting a new task to be completed before COB without regards to your other work commitments. If you don't deliver you will get "you did not meet my expectations and are not planning for success". Managers will talk out of both sides of their mouth and never make commitments, while having perfect 20/20 hind sight on why missed deadlines are due to your lack of commitment. Going above and beyond to resolve issues is rarely recognized and will usually come back to bite you. CYA is the name of the game there so if you do take a job make sure you save every email. Ask for help on a project and the typical response is "get me your action plan for how you are going to resolve this". There are just too many layers of managers leading to a high level of dysfunction. Excessive paperwork and documentation on their design methodology prevents any time for true innovation or design work be completed. Managers are concerned with "checking the box" for documentation rather than the true design being correct and reliable, but they will preach otherwise when the situation calls for it. If you interview most likely the people you talk to were selected randomly and will not be your direct co-workers as you will be assigned a different role once you walk in the door. It is not uncommon for them to shuffle around EEs to do ME work and MEs doing electrical products - reflects managements lack of interest in developing talent and more interested in developing "engineering robots" that can be tossed around to fight one fire to the next. Excessive meetings are used and scheduled to discuss every little detail which leaves little or no time for actual work to take place. Not uncommon to be double or tipple booked for meetings during any given hour of the day. If you get into a crunch expect daily or even hourly status update meetings with managers who add no value to the task at hand and only want to know when the issue will be resolved and why you are behind schedule - well maybe if you quit the hourly meetings we could get some work done and resolve the issue. No ratings were select as can not give them any stars and would rate as negative if option was available.

3.0
Sep 8, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Paid time off is pretty good. 3 weeks vacation when you start. 4 weeks vacation after five years. There is a winter shutdown each year, which is about 1.5 weeks (so you can be home when kids are on winter break). Discount on motorcycles and merchandise. Casual workplace. Opportunities for training. Pay seems pretty decent for my job category in this area. If you like motorcycles, obviously this is the place to be. Sometimes you can get involved with events.

Cons

Some pockets within the company suck (such as mine). Some really great leaders have been removed from the company during the layoffs or have just moved on. Seems that they are looking for leaders that grind people down to get 'results', rather than appreciating inspirational leaders that build people up. They seem to value leaders who run the business like a machine. And while leadership 'talks about' how they care about the workers, there really are no warm fuzzies left anymore. The company had a great 'throwback' culture which was fun and interesting. Felt like family. But now it is just 'another company' with declining culture and evaporating benefits. They do a Q12 survey to see how well people are engaged, but they take the results into a backroom and try to mind-read what the workers want, rather than directly asking employees how to improve conditions. The company talks about everyone being a leader, but that seems to have become license for aggressive people to stomp on everyone else.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 1,443 Reviews

Glassdoor has 1,749 Harley-Davidson, Inc. reviews submitted anonymously by Harley-Davidson, Inc. employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Harley-Davidson, Inc. is right for you.