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Overall employee rating

2.7
Based on 7 reviews
5
4
3
2
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Detail Ratings
Work life balance
3.0
Career Growth
3.0
Work flexibility
1.0
Job Security
4.0
Pay and benefits
3.0
Leadership
2.0
Company Culture
3.0
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Project Engineer
2.7
6 April 2026
Decent benefits, but pay needs a boost
Pros: The medical benefits are actually quite good for this type of corporate environment. You get solid coverage, and the leave policy is pretty fair for an onsite role in the Singapore yard. It helps ease some financial worries.
Cons: The base pay for Project Engineer roles isn't very competitive, honestly. Annual raises are really small, so it's tough to feel valued. Don't count on big bonuses; they're usually pretty underwhelming for the amount of work in this maritime industry.
Advice to Management: Management needs to seriously look at salary benchmarks for Project Engineers and other engineering roles. Investing more in competitive pay and meaningful performance bonuses would really help with employee retention and morale.
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Marine Engineer
2.7
28 March 2026
Onsite Culture, Little Flexibility for Most
Pros: You get solid experience working on big `offshore projects`. There's a stable job environment which is good. For some corporate roles, there's a bit of a `hybrid model` option, which is a definite plus.
Cons: However, for us `Marine Engineers` in the `Singapore office`, most of the work is `onsite work`. It's really hard to get any `work_flexibility` when you're directly involved in production. The company culture here isn't big on remote options for technical roles.
Advice to Management: Try to re-evaluate what roles truly need 100% `onsite work` versus those that could benefit from more `work_flexibility`. Modernizing policies might help with retention, especially for younger talent.
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Associate Naval Architect
2.9
23 February 2026
Okay culture, but sometimes a bit slow
Pros: Teams are solid, I've learned tons in the shipbuilding industry. Good job security for an Associate Naval Architect here in Singapore. People are mostly supportive and help you out.
Cons: Innovation feels really slow. It's a big corporate environment, so bureaucracy is real. Decisions take forever, which frustrates moving projects forward in marine engineering.
Advice to Management: Try to encourage more agile processes. Speed up decision-making, especially for new technologies in marine engineering. Empower your teams to innovate more.
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Marine Engineer
2.4
4 February 2026
Work-life balance is tough, especially on projects
Pros: The pay and benefits are pretty solid in this big corporate environment. It's a stable place for those in offshore engineering looking for long-term careers. You do learn a lot from experienced folks here.
Cons: Work-life balance is definitely a struggle; expect long hours when there are tight shipbuilding project deadlines. As a Marine Engineer, I spent most of my time in the Singapore office, and there's just not much WFH flexibility. It's a real grind during peak times.
Advice to Management: Management needs to seriously address staffing levels and how project deadlines are set. Employee burnout is a real issue here, especially for teams working on critical shipbuilding projects.
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Marine Engineer
2.9
26 January 2026
Job Security Varies in Shipbuilding Industry
Pros: Being part of a large corporate like Seatrium means there's usually a pipeline of projects. For offshore engineering roles, we often have ongoing work, so you're not constantly worried about a lack of tasks.
Cons: The project-based nature of the work can make job security feel a bit shaky sometimes. When big contracts end, especially in the shipbuilding sector, there's always that underlying worry about potential layoffs. It's tough when the market slows down.
Advice to Management: Try to provide more transparency on future project forecasts and how market changes might impact staffing. Better communication could help reduce employee anxiety.
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Project Engineer
2.4
5 December 2025
Tough hours for marine engineering projects.
Pros: The team's pretty solid, and you get to work on really big marine engineering projects. There's good exposure and learning, especially for new engineers in the shipyard.
Cons: Work-life balance here is a real struggle, especially for Project Engineer roles. You're often working long shifts, sometimes even weekends, at the Singapore yard. It's hard to switch off from these demanding offshore construction projects.
Advice to Management: Try to better distribute workloads and recognize that Project Engineers need time off. Burnout is a real concern; consider implementing actual work-life initiatives instead of just talking about them.
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Project Coordinator
2.7
1 December 2025
Decent benefits, but pay needs a boost
Pros: The health insurance for employees at this large corporate shipbuilding firm in Singapore is pretty solid. I also liked the annual leave policy; it's fair for us onsite staff. They've got a good dental plan too, which is a plus.
Cons: However, the base salary for a Project Coordinator isn't competitive, especially for the workload in the offshore engineering sector. Raises are really small, sometimes barely keeping up with inflation. There aren't many performance bonuses, which is a bummer.
Advice to Management: Really look at market rates for specialized roles like Project Coordinators in offshore engineering. Improving base salaries would make a huge difference in retention.
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