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Contemporary Amperex Technology

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Don't Join unless you can read and speak chinese - Engineer Contemporary Amperex Technology Employee Review

1.0
8 Jan 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The local team is nice the largest battery company globally so stable

Cons

- Whole team is in china but you're required to be in office 3 days out of the week. - The other people in the office are not a part of your team so you're forced to commute in to work in solitude - On top of being forced to come in everyday your actual team only starts talking to you in the evening. - There is no training per se you're just requested to go to china for "training" there is no one to help you make this happen you're just expected to show up on a day they specify - 90% of the systems are in mandarin and the instructions / SOPs are also provided in mandarin. - mandatory meetings at night that are also all in mandarin. - whatever is promised in the interviews unless in writing are just fluff so if you're considering joining this place make sure you get everything spelled out. - all decision making happens in China.

Explore other reviews about Contemporary Amperex Technology

5.0
23 Mar 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Nice and warm working environment

Cons

Nothing I can think of

1.0
9 May 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Being part of one of the largest battery manufacturers in the world does come with its advantages — the company has significant resources and global reach. Access to the Chinese side of the organization can be valuable for those who are well-connected there, and travel opportunities give you exposure to different markets and teams.

Cons

The US team operates with very little autonomy — decisions and oversight flow directly from China headquarters, and there is essentially no separation between the two. If you're not a native Mandarin speaker, expect to hit a ceiling quickly, as language fluency is an unspoken prerequisite for advancement regardless of your actual performance. Individual contributors go largely unrecognized. Results don't translate into visible career progression or acknowledgment, which makes it difficult to stay motivated. Travel is frequent but poorly planned — trips are assigned with little to no advance notice and no clear business justification, making it hard to manage your personal schedule or workload. High turnover is a persistent issue on both the US and China sides of the organization, which speaks to broader structural problems that haven't been addressed.

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