High-Potential Company with Work-Life Balance - Anonymous employee CIMON Employee Review

5.0
Jul 17, 2024
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Excellent work-life balance - Supportive, talented, and motivated team - Collaborative environment with strong team dynamic - High potential in a growing industry with cool software and hardware products

Cons

Smaller US office compared to Korean HQ, leading to some growing pains, but they are working on improvements

Explore other reviews about CIMON

5.0
Aug 31, 2024
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I’m a current employee at CIMON, and it’s been a really positive experience. The company is doing great things in industrial automation, with top-notch PLC, HMI, and SCADA products. The work environment is supportive, and there are plenty of opportunities for growth and development. Management genuinely cares about employees, which makes it a great place to work.

Cons

Communication between departments could be improved; sometimes it feels like information gets lost in the shuffle.

4.0
Jul 15, 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- High potential for growth within the company and your career, based on your performance and initiative. - Reasonable salary relative to expectations and experience level. - Friendly and capable coworkers. - Healthy and open communication within the same level; if you have a question or need help, people are quick to respond. - Low pressure; when minor issues arise, your job security doesn't come into question. - Good work-life balance; developers get flex schedules. Overtime is very rare for most departments and is compensated. - Solid benefits and decent PTO. - Mini-benefits like snacks, company dinners, company outings, etc. - Everyone has a voice in the direction of the product and the company.

Cons

- Lack of direction at the corporate level; decisions are made based on short-term benefits rather than long-term strategy. - When customers make requests, it often results in ongoing objectives (including those you've already worked on) being delayed or cancelled. - Managers receive very little training. - Company-level communication is poor; it can be unnecessarily difficult to get answers to basic questions, and it's not always clear who is in charge of which responsibilities. - Lack of planning and organization for day-to-day work; teams mostly work on what they think is important in the moment. Long-term goals have low priority. - Lack of authority for product/feature decisions; because everyone has a voice, the loudest voice often wins.

1
See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All