ASML reviews

4.0

78% would recommend to a friend

(3,085 total reviews)
avatar

Christophe Fouquet

74% approve of CEO

74% positive business outlook

ASML has an employee rating of 4.0 out of 5 stars, based on 3,085 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The ASML employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Produktion industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

3K reviews
2.0
Nov 15, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Salary and holidays are great. Campus is convenient. Product has always been the unique selling point for true engineers.

Cons

Past years a lot of incompetent people were promoted also to higher management positions. Powerplay and growing their kingdoms has become an objective trumping company and customer value even. Micromanaging without any strategic vision and selective (ab)use of data to report out makes for a very toxic environment where management cliques promote each other.

1.0
Sep 19, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Profit sharing 13 th month

Cons

Team of individuals with less than 1.5 years of experience in ASML, and unfortunately, lack of familiarity with protocols or contact information. Additionally, the supervision provided (Buddy's with less than 1 year working at ASML) to new engineers are inadequate, as they assigned tasks without a clear understanding of how to contribute effectively. The virtual training they offer, which are expected to prepare new engineers for their tasks, are often tedious, lacking clarity, and not very helpful. The internal competition to achieve year-end bonuses for a salary increase is a problem, the managers or team leaders above you dont hesitate to screw your efforts, even if it ends your career.

1.0
Jul 29, 2023

HMI review - not ASML

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-ASML is a solid company, profit sharing is good -Okay benefits and pay (better than for the average person but the worst of the few tech companies I’ve worked for) -I don’t have anything good to say about HMI, probably okay if you’ve never worked anywhere else or are fluent in Mandarin

Cons

Reading some of the reviews on here from years ago, nothing has changed. Working for HMI is rough. Most of the people who enjoy working for HMI have not ever worked for another company and/or are fluent in Mandarin. -If you do not speak Mandarin, you are treated like an outsider and do not have access to the same knowledge and training as those who do. If you find yourself struggling to learn or understand things because of this, you’ll be treated as though you are incompetent or lazy as opposed to experiencing very real and significant language barriers. -Work life balance is generally not good. It seems to be an expectation of the Taiwanese workers to work 10-12 hour days 7 days a week. If you protest this grueling and completely unreasonable schedule, your reputation will be negatively affected. There is no work life balance drafted into policy and therefore it is abused (e.g. it is not written policy that workers who go above 40 hours can take comp time, which is something other companies do to avoid these types of abuses, nor is it written in that there are paid or required breaks). HR policies need to be more robust to protect workers, they are the least clear/protective of any company I have worked for in this industry. -The level of chaos and disorganization is astonishing. It is an accepted part of the culture that training and documentation is extremely low quality. Specs are not well studied or understood. Something being “good” is often completely subjective. Couple this with a language barrier and it is not difficult to see why there is a lack of quality for products and installation in general. This company does not have a quality mindset and yet blames individuals for its systemic failures. -The long term strategy seems like it is to wing it and make it work. When you work in an industry that is reliant on consistency, quality, and data driven decisions, it is no surprise HMIs customers are frequently unhappy. It makes it even more difficult as a first line engineer to feel the wrath first line and be blamed for strategic and quality failures that come from factory and management. -Most of the people in senior positions have been there a long time. They have no concept of what things are really like in a fab or ebeam experience other than what they know from HMI and they expect people to follow orders. Some of the technical aspects of the tool are simply incorrect because there is no diversity of thought or experience, or they are sloppily designed that make it difficult to use because there is no forethought. If you have suggestions to change something you need to know the right person and even then it goes into a black hole. From typos to misnomers to bugs, it’s a mess. -They hire a lot of PhDs who don’t have much practical experience and not many people with actual semiconductor fab/process experience. There’s a lot of arrogance and arrogance is the bane of good engineering. Most of the time, people cannot give you a good coherent answer as to why they designed something a certain way. It’s disappointing to see ASML comment on these complaints and requesting people to escalate these things individually. There is a lack of accountability across the board. There is an enormous problem at HMI and the change needs to be drastic and it’s not going to come from submitting an anonymous complaint. ASML should take more ownership of understanding the fundamental issues at HMI and improving them.

Viewing 163 - 165 of 3,085 Reviews

Glassdoor has 4,315 ASML reviews submitted anonymously by ASML employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if ASML is right for you.