Microsoft

Software, cloud & services
Last updated:
January 23, 2026
Company details
HQ
Redmond, WA
HEADCOUNT
10000+
ORG TYPE
Corporate
SECTOR
Technology & Digital
About the company
Microsoft is a global technology company best known for Windows, Microsoft 365, Azure cloud services, and developer tools like GitHub and Visual Studio. Microsoft also builds consumer and enterprise products across gaming (Xbox), search and advertising, cybersecurity, and AI products such as Copilot. Microsoft sells mainly to enterprises, governments, developers, and consumers through a mix of subscriptions, cloud usage, and device and software licensing. Microsoft operates at massive global scale and runs large, repeatable hiring pipelines for both students and full-time roles.
Locations and presence
Microsoft has major offices and engineering hubs across North America, Europe, and Asia, with a large global footprint across many cities listed on Microsoft Careers. Microsoft has been tightening hybrid expectations, including an update to three in-office days per week that starts rolling out from the Puget Sound area from late February 2026.
Palpable Score
86.9
/ 100
Microsoft offers some of the clearest and most repeatable early-career entry points in tech, spanning first-year internships, new-grad hiring, sales and customer-facing early-in-profession tracks, and apprenticeship-style routes. The hiring process is structured and widely documented, and learning support is visible across multiple programs, though team-to-team variation still matters once someone lands. Pay tends to be competitive with strong benefits, and outcomes look positive, but Microsoft does not publish consistent early-career retention and promotion metrics.
Pillar 1: Early-career access

Score

18.6
/ 20
  • The company runs multiple named student and early-career routes, including Explore Microsoft (first and second year internship), Microsoft Aspire (recent graduate experience), and Microsoft Leap (apprenticeship-style entry).
  • Microsoft posts a steady volume of internships and new-grad roles globally across engineering, program management, sales, and operations on the Microsoft Careers student portal.
  • The company publishes an “Early in profession” pathway (MCAPS EiP) that is explicitly designed as a multi-year early-career program rather than a single entry role.

Pillar 2: Hiring fairness and transparency

Score

16.2
/ 20

  • The company publishes public guidance on what to expect, including typical interview formats such as multiple conversations with teammates and an initial and final interview structure for student hiring.
  • Microsoft uses standardised assessment formats across many early-career roles, which reduces randomness but can still feel opaque on scoring and feedback for rejected candidates.
  • The company’s refreshed careers platform improves visibility of openings, but Microsoft does not consistently commit to role-by-role timelines or feedback guarantees in public materials.

Pillar 3: Learning and support

Score

17.4
/ 20
  • The company builds structured learning into early-career programs, including the Microsoft Aspire Experience positioning as a dedicated early-in-career development experience and community.
  • Microsoft Leap is explicitly described as a 16-week program combining classroom learning and hands-on engineering projects on real teams and products.
  • The company has strong internship learning signals, with Explore Microsoft structured around a “pod” model that walks interns through design, build, and quality phases rather than leaving interns to self-serve.

Pillar 4: Pay fairness and stability

Score

18.0
/ 20
  • The company has made pay transparency more concrete in the US by committing to disclose salary ranges across job postings, improving fairness for early-career candidates comparing offers.
  • Microsoft pays competitively in many technical tracks, with widely tracked compensation data showing strong total compensation bands across common early-career levels in the US and other markets.
  • The company has also had periods of layoffs and restructuring in recent years, which slightly reduces the stability score even though Microsoft still tends to offer stable full-time contracts and strong benefits.

Pillar 5: Early-career outcomes

Score

16.7
/ 20
  • The company has visible multi-year early-career pathways such as MCAPS EiP (three-year program) and Aspire, which supports structured progression rather than leaving outcomes entirely to manager discretion.
  • Microsoft shows strong early-career satisfaction signals in internship-specific review patterns, which typically correlate with better conversion and onboarding outcomes than ad hoc internship setups.
  • The company does not publish consistent, cohort-level metrics like new-grad promotion rates, conversion rates from intern to full-time, or early-career retention by discipline, which limits how high the outcomes score can go without relying on anecdotes.

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