Poor Communication, No Stability, and Loss of Skilled Engineers - Systems Engineer Symbotic Employee Review

2.0
Jun 1, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Interesting technology and exposure to advanced automation systems. Opportunity to work on complex engineering projects.

Cons

Poor work-life balance with high expectations and little flexibility. Communication from leadership and the general manager was very limited, making it difficult to stay aligned. There was also a lack of transparency around performance expectations and job security. Even when performing well and fully understanding the environment and workflows, employees could be let go without warning or a second chance. This creates unnecessary turnover and results in lost knowledge, requiring time and resources to retrain new engineers who are unfamiliar with the systems.

Explore other reviews about Symbotic

5.0
May 27, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

• Cutting-edge A.I.-powered robotics — you work on technology that's actually transforming the supply chain • Brilliant colleagues across engineering, robotics, controls, and software • Real ownership from day one — step up and you'll be recognized • Direct customer impact — your work runs in live operations for the world's largest retailers • Fast growth means real career opportunities

Cons

• Pace is intense — tight deadlines and demanding periods come with the territory • Steep learning curve early on due to system complexity • Processes are still maturing as the company scales rapidly

2.0
Jan 7, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Exceptionally smart, talented, and dedicated people at the individual contributor level. Many employees are genuinely impressive and committed to their work despite many challenges.

Cons

Symbotic has struggled to build a healthy, sustainable culture. Leadership operates with limited trust in employees, resulting in heavy micromanagement and slow decision-making. Nepotism is a persistent issue—advancement often favors relatives, friends, or former colleagues brought in as part of external hiring waves, while internal talent is overlooked. As the company grew quickly, it failed to establish critical support functions (HR, admin. support, PMO, etc.) at the pace required, leaving teams under-resourced and employees burned out. There are few meaningful internal development opportunities, limited recognition of existing employees, and a constant focus on the “next shiny object” rather than investing in and retaining current talent. Some members of the executive team hold leadership roles at other companies, which limits their availability and responsiveness to Symbotic teams when critical decisions are needed. This contributes to significant project delays, unclear direction, and a perception that employee and operational concerns are not always a top priority. Overall, the environment can feel transactional, political, and disconnected, with little sense of shared culture.

9
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