Good pay and stodgy culture = Tech Worker Retirement Home - Business Development Manager Adobe Employee Review

2.0
Jan 9, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The salary at is pretty good, relative to other tech companies in the valley. The work-life balance is also very good. The brand looks great on a resume, and generally carries some clout when dealing with partners and customers. Further, you generally look cool at a party when you say you work with Adobe.

Cons

Adobe feels and operates like a much larger company than it actually is. I'm not sure if it has to do with a culture rooted in PDF and form handling, but Adobe moves in a very slow and bureaucratic fashion. Execs like to say it's a "conservative" culture --but on a day-to-day basis it just feels like I work for General Motors or some mega-corp. Adobe's future is questionable. They continue to do a great job extracting revenue from their existing products, but have repeatedly failed to re-invent themselves or develop a new major revenue stream. At this rate they are destined to end up more like Xerox or Kodak than IBM or GE. Right now they are stuck operationally, and strategically as a packaged channel software company. This makes exploring new business models (SaaS, Enterprise, etc.) nearly impossible despite a rhetorical ethos of innovation. Promotions are hard to come by at Adobe. They fancy themselves a very flat organization and it's nearly impossible to get promoted to Director or VP. This flat org approach means the opportunity for career advancement are very limited. It also means that Adobe has a strange hero-worship for their executives. Coming from Macromedia, where our execs were just normal people (though often very bright), this is pretty weird. Adobe doesn't value intellect in hiring or promoting. They would much rather bring in a hired gun (castoff) from another tech company , with a mediocre resume, versus promoting or developing internal candidates of promise. This has played out time and time again, with employees leaving, and re-joining several years later in order to get a promotion. It also plays out daily in terms of work interactions, where I'm forced to deal with people that just aren't very bright. Last off, Adobe's best asset (work-life balance) is also one of it's major drawbacks. For the most part, employees don't feel a sense of ownership or a strong desire to do the right thing for the customers or the business. There is a fairly pervasive "punch-the-clock" mentality. The "that's not my job" and "that decision is above my paygrade" attitudes are rampant throughout the company. It reminds me of when I worked in a factory full of teamsters. Punch in at 8, punch out at 5, do your job and nothing more, and do anything possible to avoid extra work. Further, if anybody expects anything of you, complain to the Union Steward.

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5.0
Jun 26, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good benefits Treated well Sabbatical Policy

Cons

Large Sometimes bloated Political Manager dependent

4.0
Jun 16, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

* Refreshing focus on employee wellness * Brilliant colleagues * Compelling problems on interesting tools * Good work/life balance culture... generally (see cons) I've been at a few big tech companies and Adobe is one of my favorites. I feel empowered to make impactful changes here, I'm constantly stretching myself in fun ways, and the products we make are incredible. Product and engineering have big dreams, and all the resources we need to realize them.

Cons

* Big time crunch culture around arbitrary goals By far my biggest disappointment has been just how hard product pushes on big projects with arbitrary deadlines and difficult scope. It turns into cutting corners and delivering sub-par experiences even though we absolutely have the talent and capability to make some exceptional things if we just let the dang thing bake a few more months. I'd be more impressed with the tight clip if the goals were reasonable for good business reasons, but as far as I can tell the reason usually boils down to "some high-level manager wanted X and thought Y sounded like a good target date". * Comp growth leaves something to be desired. Raises feel pretty flat, though it's not the worst thing since stock rewards can be pretty good as appropriate for performance. Career progression is pretty good here too - I just find it odd how stale the base pay increases are year to year.

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