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BAE Systems, Inc.

HQ
Falls Church
Total Offices: 23
40,000 Total Employees
Year Founded: 1999

BAE Systems, Inc. Leadership & Management

BAE Systems, Inc. Employee Perspectives

What’s a quotable hallmark of good management on your team — and how is it reinforced weekly?

A hallmark of good management on my team is that we run decisions through three filters: put the work where it belongs; codify and document what we do so it is repeatable and teachable; and keep a business-focused perspective in the room.

These guiding principles matter because cyber assurance cannot operate in a vacuum. If assurance is disconnected from the business, it becomes a barrier. We reinforce those principles every week in how we review work, assign ownership, and make processes clearer and more scalable. If something is not documented, it cannot be shared. If ownership is unclear, execution will suffer. And if the business context is missing, we are not solving the right problem.

A simple philosophy guides us: Say what you do, do what you say, and prove it. My team is the “prove it” function.

 

Which forum or artifact keeps priorities obvious?

The forum that keeps priorities most obvious for us is our team standup with no formal agenda, which occurs twice each week. Since much of the team is remote, that unstructured time creates the equivalent of hallway conversations, and it often surfaces the issues that matter most.

We also have a broader operating rhythm that keeps alignment visible. Each week, our cyber assurance program teams across sectors meet to compare approaches and outcomes, which helps us reinforce repeatable processes and make sure people understand not just what we’re doing, but how we’re doing it.

On top of that, we have an oversight committee made up of senior leaders across cybersecurity, compliance and assurance. That forum reviews deficiencies, discusses response plans, and helps keep priorities clear at the decision-making level.

For me, it’s the combination that works: informal conversations to surface what’s real, and structured reviews to keep everyone aligned on what matters most.

 

What part of the strategy excites people — and what metric shows progress?

What excites people most is a shift from pure compliance to business outcomes. We’ve moved beyond just telling teams the rules and toward a more productive conversation: What are you trying to accomplish, and how can we help you achieve it within the rules or identify another compliant path forward?

That changes the role of cyber assurance. We aren’t here just to enforce requirements; we’re here to protect the business while helping it move with confidence. When teams see assurance as a partner in solving problems, not just identifying them, engagement increases, decisions improve, and collaboration is stronger.

A key sign of progress is how much more time we now spend beyond traditional cyber channels. We’re engaging more directly with programs and business technology officers, not just assurance teams, to understand goals earlier and help shape practical solutions that support mission delivery and business growth.

To me, that is the right measure: stronger business engagement while still delivering the compliance and assurance outcomes we are accountable for. When we help the business pursue more strategic efforts in the right way, that creates momentum and more opportunities.

Michael Corwin
Michael Corwin, Senior Director of Cyber Assurance

BAE Systems, Inc. Employee Reviews

I really felt like I was in the right spot here at BAE when I first met a leader of ours. He is also a fellow veteran, and he was still wearing his jump wings. So I immediately, in having jump wings myself, kind of asked him about that and noticed that he was an Airborne veteran. I could relate to him, I belonged here.

Jason P.
Jason P., Subcontracts Manager
Jason P., Subcontracts Manager

We get a lot of opportunities as early career workers to be at the forefront of leading different things. One of the first big presentations, I was very nervous. And my managers were like, you got this, you know what you're talking about. Getting to do it more and more over time made it easier.

AJ B.
AJ B., Systems Engineer
AJ B., Systems Engineer

Mentorship is really key to what we do as a team every day, both one-on-one and in small groups, small teams. I personally have been and continue to be mentored by folks with more years of experience than I have. That's really important because at some point, they will have to pass the baton, and those you're going to pass the baton to have to be ready. It's up to all of us to make sure that they are.

Tim P.
Tim P., VP of Strategic Communications
Tim P., VP of Strategic Communications

What People Are Saying About BAE Systems, Inc.

  • Strategic Vision & Planning: Leadership repeatedly articulates stable enterprise priorities and growth vectors, including space and advanced electronics. Portfolio actions, such as creating Space & Mission Systems after the Ball Aerospace acquisition, align investment with the stated plan.
  • Strong Execution: Record backlog, multi‑domain program wins, and maintained growth guidance indicate the strategy is being executed against clear targets. Successes like a U.S. Space Force missile‑tracking constellation reinforce momentum across priority domains.
  • Collaborative & Aligned Leadership: Top‑down messaging is consistent across corporate, U.S. leadership, and investor channels, signaling alignment on direction. Public framing of near‑, mid‑, and long‑term horizons clarifies shared priorities across sectors.

BAE Systems, Inc.'s Benefits

Defined policies promoting a professional, respectful workplace

Defined values and mission statements

Documented policies and procedures to protect employee privacy and data

Engineering team utilizes pair programming

Hosts in-person all-hands meetings

Implements team-based strategic planning

Leadership encourages open, transparent debate

Leadership is transparent and communicative

Mistakes are treated as learning opportunities

Open office floor plan to encourage communication and collaboration

Policies promote a low-ego, team-driven culture

Prioritizes mission-driven work in decision-making processes

Prioritizes real-world impact of work in decision-making processes

Promotes a people-first, social culture

Promotes a strong in-person office culture

Uses an OKR operational model to clearly define goals and priorities

Utilizes an open door policy that encourages accessibility