Skim through these reviews and you'll see patterns - QA Engineer MobileSmith Employee Review

2.0
18 Dec 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Fellow co-workers were great. Friendly, hard-working people were the norm. Seasonal events were fun. I learned a lot about my chosen career path, and it helped me move on to a much better opportunity.

Cons

Even the good reviews mention 'growing pains', and I am pretty sure those are from present employees who have been tasked with shoring up the star rating. Unfortunately, the low reviews are more honest. The CEO listed here is not the current CEO. The guy in charge now clearly wants the luxury of leaning heavily on his direct reports' decisions, but those guys hate each other and boy does that make trying to get pretty much anything done at MobileSmith super hard. Everyone is overworked and underpaid, and that situation was just accelerating when I left. This was done in the name of profitability, but it's hard to imagine how profitable a company with a team that is so gun-shy and burnt out can possibly be. People were constantly rotating out for various reasons (more money, less hassle, more structure, getting out from under the horrible, sometimes abusive, management) and as of 2nd half of 2017 positions were not being backfilled. So the review that mentioned 'doing the work of 2-3 people' is pretty dead on. How long does a company have 'growing pains' like this? Sales did a great job of bringing in new customers, but all attempts to retain the customers once acquired had stopped by the time I left. There were only enough people to keep feature work moving forward, but one wonders who features are even for when customers stick for two years and then drop service. The product is a good idea that is being progressively poorly implemented due to constant change: mobile years are worse than dog years, and trying to keep up an aging and extremely complex platform built on an obsolete framework that only a few people still present even know how to use feels like a losing proposition. Rotating new people in is not the best idea when it can take six months to a year for someone to learn how to use the product enough to actually work on it. All that said, the biggest problem I had, aside from the extremely low pay, was the complete lack of structure. Not only was there virtually no direction or leadership coming from management, frequently we'd get conflicting messages; many times from the same person! And then, in the course of your job you'd try to make decisions to keep work moving forward, you would be told that those decisions were utterly wrong. Big changes, like development methodology (which changed three times in the < 3 years I was there), were mandated without team input and you were expected to be psychic with respect to these changes as training was non-existent. Responses to questions asked frequently took the shape of a 45 minute monologue about team direction on the topic, and you are left even more puzzled than before you asked the question. But again, be prepared to be read the riot act if you guessed wrong. Low pay and hard work are obstacles that can be overcome if you trust the product you're making or your managers, or at the very least enjoy the work you're doing, but piling on top of that deep confusion and systemic chaos because of poor leadership and terrible communication just isn't going to work out. My guess is soon there won't be any 'growing pains', only regular pain as everything falls apart.

Explore other reviews about MobileSmith

5.0
14 Oct 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Team is very smart and leadership empowers all of us

Cons

Sales team needs to improve.

1.0
18 Apr 2017
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Some of the nicest, most professional and hard-working people in the industry. All-star development team and, formerly, management team until some unfortunate things started happening.

Cons

The leader (current CEO) declares great principles - nurturing employees; giving credit where it's due; resolving differences - but only applies them to people he likes. People he dislikes, on the other hand, are scapegoated; stifled; never given proper credit, and even publicly shamed. Double standards are rampant. Mediocrities are coddled at the expense of talented people. Women seem to be especially targeted for abuse and intellectual pilfering. The churn is very high, particularly in sales and marketing. Morale has taken a dive. The CEO desperately tries to whip it up at "all hands" meetings, but most employees, I think, see through the smoke. The company has been stagnating below the red line for years, and "get to break-even" does not sound like an inspiring goal any more. When the leader is in love with his product and prone to angrily shutting out alternative perspectives, stagnation is pretty much a given. Systematic market research is nonexistent. Product strategy is ad-hoc; based entirely on assumptions. Arrogance may sell, but it does not keep customers. Many of them have already left.

7
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