Updating Results

Hydro Tasmania

4.1
  • 1,000 - 50,000 employees

Hydro Tasmania Reviews

Based on 17 surveyed graduates working at Hydro Tasmania. Read on to get an insider’s view on life as a graduate.
4.1
Based on 17 reviews

Pros & Cons

  • Interesting work, the company values helping the community, work/life balance, remuneration
  • Great mix of on-site and off-site work. I am the sort of person that enjoys getting their hands dirty and working with the site crews. Big cool assets from a large variety of manufacturers, so there's always something unusual to solve.
  • Encouragement and support for graduates working on major projects with other staff. Large focus on development opportunities with a training budget for grads each FY.
  • Hydro Tasmania has a very steep learning curve in regard to its systems and processes which can take a new starter a while to get their head around.
  • It’s a big, old business with a lot of legacy issues and it’s sometimes overwhelming. It’s hard to see and implement improvement because there is a lot of people who have been around for a long time.
  • The company doesn't have a strong knowledge base for reference, forum to whats happening in the whole organisation level, and a lack of documentation/content.

What Insiders Say

7.5
Career Prospects
7.5
Career Prospects
A few past grads are in the team I'm in currently, as well as one of the senior leaders is a past grad, I'm sure there are many more I don't know about so it's certainly possible
8.0
Corporate Social Responsibility
8.0
Corporate Social Responsibility
Hydro Tasmania has community partnerships with charities including: Colony 47, Volunteering Tasmania and The Smith Family. They also provide community grants up to $5,000 to Tasmanian based NFPs. I have not had the chance to work on any projects/initiatives as yet.
7.5
Culture
7.5
Culture
Friendly, polite, and understanding, big focus on safety. Teams are small, which allow you to learn more from others and provides you access to leaders. After work drinks and events are always good, but not compulsory. Value a good work/life balance.
8.2
Diversity
8.2
Diversity
In terms of Hydro's commitment to the things listed in the question, it is great, and Hydro is doing lots to encourage diversity. In terms of maternity/carers leave, that is covered. In terms of the actual diversity of Hydro at present, it is still (at least in engineering) very male-dominated, however, I have not noticed on my part any "anti-diversity" attitudes, so-to-speak. In fact, everyone supports increased diversity as far as I am aware of.
8.0
Satisfaction
8.0
Satisfaction
Depends on the day, some days will be conducting inspections in the field, to working with my hands in the field, to sorting through data in an office, to modelling and designing
7.7
Management
7.7
Management
My immediate manager is very accessible and helpful, although they are very busy a lot of the time. Other senior members of the team would probably fit more in the category of mentor (this is partly because my manager is a mechanical engineer whereas I am electrical).
7.8
Office Work Environment
7.8
Office Work Environment
This has changed a lot recently due to a big shift to working from home. However, the main office in Hobart is a decent facility and is undergoing recent renovations to the ground and first floors. Dress code is standard business/office attire, but there is a well established casual Friday. Hydro has various field sites with 30 different power stations. These sites all have decent facilities for the most part, but some are quite remote. Dress code for these is PPE.
7.9
Recruitment
7.9
Recruitment
Fewer rounds than other grad recruitment processes which made it easier. Only resume/cover letter, work sample, video interview, assessment centre/interview on same day. Small assessment centre was more relaxing (about 10 people vs 40 people). Lots of phone calls and emails to guide you through the process. Seemed focused on selling themselves as much as you selling yourself. E.g. told us about volunteer leave, why they value grads, etc.
7.7
Salary
7.7
Salary
Reasonable for graduates with increase each year.
7.5
Training
7.5
Training
Informal training is great, all the more senior employees are great and willing resource to learn from. The graduate program provides a training budget for formal training courses from external providers.
8.5
Work Hours
8.5
Work Hours
Normal working hours of 37.5 per week. This is up to you to manage, with no strict start/finish times. I would say quite flexible over all. Site work can involve much longer days for weeks/months at a time - but you get paid overtime so that almost makes up for it.
8.6
Sustainability
8.6
Sustainability
We do a lot, including a latest initiative "too good to waste" where more things are being recycled and we are producing less waste