Simply sad - poor place to invest your time - Hardware Engineer EnduroSat Employee Review

1.0
27 Jan 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good presentations, nice kitchen and I like the location. Web site is nice.

Cons

Low salary, lack of integrity, lack of competency, no managerial skills, flat structure that affects the efficiency, lack of responsibility. Sounds like a sexy company but the reality is - it has nothing to do with the aerospace. It delivers only devices working on the ground despite of the solar pannels.

Explore other reviews about EnduroSat

2.0
25 Oct 2024
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

A lot of potential opportunities in a fast-growing industry.

Cons

EnduroSat suffers from a lack of defined procedures, structure or clear/unified direction. There's no operational strategy or structured middle management, with everyone reporting to the founder, which leads to parallel efforts, lack of authority, chaos and inefficiency. The company is overly focused on material image rather than substance, fostering a culture obsessed with appearances rather than meaningful results. A dismissive attitude toward customer engagement undermines revenue growth and relationship-building. Compensation package and benefits are below industry standards. Leadership shows little trust in its employees, resulting in a toxic environment where people are discouraged from questioning decisions or offering input. The leadership culture is rigid, with no room for growth, transparency, or meaningful contribution.

11
3.0
24 Nov 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Some people may get what feels like an opportunity of a lifetime-at least that’s how it seems at the start. You’ll find a few truly top-notch engineers, solid labs, a clean room, and good support equipment… and that’s about it.

Cons

Management is so incompetent they don’t even realize how incompetent they are. It’s beyond out of touch-almost delusional. The system engineers/mission managers aren’t much better; the lack of competence is at its peak. They can’t prioritize mission-critical testing and have no grasp of what actually requires thorough validation, which ultimately turns the mission operators’ (and most of the team) job into a nightmare… if you know, you know. If it weren’t for a few capable engineers constantly saving the day, things would... - well, again, if you know, you know. With leadership that has no idea what it’s doing and a systems team that doesn’t recognize when it’s completely out of its depth, maintaining any kind of work-life balance becomes a real challenge.

3
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