Pluspunten
Boeing India has some real positives. Work-life balance is strong — with most high-stakes projects handled in the U.S., workloads in India are predictable and less stressful than typical tech companies. Some functions follow a 2-day hybrid model, adding flexibility. Holidays and perks are generous, and the car lease policy is excellent. The company takes D&I seriously, making the environment generally positive for female employees. Add in job security, stable pay, and a globally respected brand, and the foundation is solid.
Minpunten
Most of the cons associated with Boeing, are regional issues with how local India units are run. Cons: Promotions - Career progression is stagnant. Promotions are more about how well managers can “sell” their team members than about merit. K-level managers spend endless time drafting promotion cases, only to face shifting criteria with every new director. Work across levels (L1–L4) is often indistinguishable, with everyone assigned similar user stories - this makes it very difficult to differentiate work. Career Development - ICs are left to “own their careers” without direction or structure. Even well-intentioned managers can’t support growth, as their time is consumed by reporting and meetings. Personal Growth and learning ends up self-driven, with little organizational backing apart from access to learning resources - the best of which are not available on demand. Second-Line Managers - Often the weakest link. Many lack strategy, operate for personal gain, and avoid accountability. A large part of their own workload is pushed down to first-line managers, who already lead 20–25 people and handle delivery. Surveys unfairly spotlight first-line managers (due to larger teams giving candid feedback), while second-line managers escape scrutiny because their few direct reports fear retaliation. HR hasn’t helped — past cases of HR relaying negative feedback directly back to leaders only deepen mistrust. In IT&DA especially, some second-line managers display open disrespect: shouting at subordinates, ridiculing them, or hinting at appraisal control — behavior that blatantly contradicts Boeing’s values. Operational Inefficiency - Around 40% of a manager’s week is lost to meetings — often meetings to prepare for other meetings. Example: an “M”-level EPS manager ran 90-minute manager meetings just to collect headcount numbers. Repetitive all-hands from directors, heads, and executives waste further hours, with duplicate content. Bureaucracy is heavy, processes slow, and organizational models constantly change (Horizon 2, POD, then something else). The issue isn’t change, but change for the sake of it, leaving employees confused and disengaged. Innovation - In IT&DA, “innovation” is largely a showpiece. Initiatives feel forced, contrived, and designed for slides rather than substance. True ownership of impactful projects is rare, keeping India teams on the periphery. HR Accountability - HR avoids clear directives and instead uses managers as enforcers without giving them authority. Example: return-to-office guidance — HR won’t communicate directly, but expects managers to enforce it saying it is business driven. This creates frustration for both managers and employees.