InMobi reviews

3.7

64% would recommend to a friend

(1,073 total reviews)
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Naveen Tewari

67% approve of CEO

51% positive business outlook

InMobi has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 1,073 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The InMobi employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

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1K reviews
1.0
Oct 29, 2014

To describe this company with one word: Inept

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Ability to learn a lot about the industry Catered lunches frequent office parties Employees are great people, with a few key mentors still around The InMobi Ad Network has tremendous global scale

Cons

The company actively engages in fabricating Glassdoor reviews (its embarrassingly obvious), which is extremely unethical. Many people were lied to about roles and responsibilities to get them in the door. The shortest tenured employee left in 2 weeks. They do not care about the employees, consistently downplaying real problems in the company and overblowing small “victories” that seem to exemplify InMobi as being a “winner” Favoritism is rampant, with people who add 0 value (sometimes detract value) staying on board simply because they praise the company shamelessly. The company went from being staffed at over 100+ to teetering barely over 20 in less than 2 years. After the IT manager quit they sent someone from India HQ to fill in temporarily. He came thinking he was there for 2 weeks and they forced him to stay there for over a quarter. This company does not care for its employees' well being. The company is only 5-6 years old and is already rife with political problem. Middle managers are completely out of touch and brown nose to the execs when they visit from their ivory tower. Consistently throw workers below them under the bus to save their own skin. The company launches too many products, claiming them as game changers while patting themselves on the back and celebrating their “genius,” all the while never doing Q&A. Most of them have one fatal flaw that renders them obsolete or useless. The product is swept under the rug and never spoken of again. See App Publish, Mediation, LTVP, Custom FSI Frames, App Galleries, and these are just the external products. Culture is set around the mantra “the beatings will continue until morale improves.” At one point they were making employees stay back until a certain time, in some misguided attempt to keep employees at the office longer, cultivating a culture through “quantity time” instead of Quality. Its some kind of twisted fantasy land. The compensation is absurdly low for anyone below middle management. Promised compensation changes are consistently pushed back another quarter, with backhanded/greedy tactics being employed to nickel and dime each and every employee. Either by adding pay raises in the form of “bonuses” (which should be considered insulting) or stalling til next quarter. InMobi fails to realize that when they pay low salaries, all the talented workers will leave for better jobs, and they will eventually get workers who deserve that low pay. The result of this practice has left them dependent on a few key competent workers supporting an entire network, once these people leave they will be replaced with rookies to the company and industry. They have shifted a lot of the responsibility of operational work to India, which may make sense from a budget standpoint but partners and clients don't like the idea of 8:00 AM/PM calls to accommodate the time difference.

1.0
Nov 6, 2017

Valuable but generally awful experience.

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Compensation was competitive. - Perks (free lunch, 401k match, gym reimbursement) are pretty good (although standard for a well-funded startup in SF/Valley). - Depending on the team, a lot of latitude to shape your role and take on responsibilities if no one else is already doing something. Lots of gaps to slide into. - Some of the people are really, really great. - Opportunity to travel to India. - You'll learn a lot about how NOT to do things. Best practices by negative demonstration. - If you survive, you'll learn how to solve problems and get stuff done. An interviewer once commented, "Oh, you're from InMobi. You must be really good at putting out fires and dealing with problems." Yep.

Cons

- Awful, awful culture in the US office. Working here was a pretty eye-opening experience in how not to hire and how not to manage people. - The time zone difference between SF and HQ in Bangalore is a beast, either 12.5 or 13.5 hours depending on time of year. Unless you're willing to stay up in the middle of the night, you have a couple hours in the evening and maybe a couple in the morning (if Indian co-workers are willing to work late-night on their end). - Communication is broadly poor. Non-exec personnel rarely travel from Bangalore to SF (even less in the other direction) and educational sessions on new developments happen at 3 AM PST, opening up a ever-widening knowledge gaps. Major product changes are pushed out without consulting teams relying on the product, servers are deprecated without sufficient notice to stakeholders, etc. - Execution is weak with lack of accountability. Across the board, output is sloppy. When (not if) things go wrong, folks are often more concerned with passing the blame than fixing the problem. - Speaking of fixing problems, it doesn't happen. The culture is broadly reactive rather than proactive. Teams run into the same problems over and over again, and no one ever takes a step back to assess and address underlying issues. They attack the symptoms furiously but ignore the root cause. And they don't even attack the symptoms that well. Consistent but non-catastrophic problems hampering productivity are ignored. Catastrophic problems get duct-taped back together rather than actually fixed, complicating future releases. - US teams do not have nearly enough autonomy. Far too often something breaks and only Bangalore has either the ability or authority to fix it. Simple tasks on new products might take special back-end access that only one engineer in Bangalore has. If you need to fire it while that person's asleep... tough. - There's a bias towards throwing more man-hours at repetitive tasks and pain points, rather than implementing effective automation or improving tools. Smart people devote too much time on mundane tasks because workflow isn't streamlined, damaging morale, engagement, and retention. - Headcount is bloated, with too many incompetent middle managers. Significant personnel redundancies in some areas and not nearly enough resources in others. Far too many people have the attitude of "not my problem", and a shocking number will deny a problem even exists (apparently "cannot replicate issue" means the issue doesn't exist). You'll constantly have to hunt down the person who can solve your issue and then bombard that person with a stream of follow-up emails to get them to do their job. - On the flipside, people at times get overzealous and try to tackle issues outside their competency. Numerous times folks escalated minor problems they didn't understand, portraying minor hiccups as p0 issues, actively making those problems more difficult to manage, and making it harder to get resources for future problems. - There's an institutional resistance to change. I've spoken with folks who worked at InMobi before my time and they were staggeringly consistent in their complaints. - You end up with a perfect storm that manages to be both chaotic and bureaucratic. Avoidable fire drills are common. Minor requests turn into multi-day ordeals, because small confusion holds up progress, folks lack the initiative and/or authority to make calls, and you have small daily windows for India to get status updates. Major requests turn into insane rabbit holes with emails ever growing list of people added to email threads, constant passing of the buck, and countless hounding follow-up emails. Startup chaos is fine if teams are empowered to take initiative and attack issues as they arise; bloated corporate bureaucracy is manageable if it provides clarity, standardizes processes, and lessens stress. Fostering a chaotic environment while maintaining structural barriers to getting things done is really the worst possible outcome. - People are treated as fungible. Layoffs and the like are not handled well. The talented colleagues I liked and respected generally churned out pretty quick, let go, or had one foot out of the door. The ones who stay are stuck because of their visa situation or grossly overpaid and riding things out. - Fundamentally, the work's not that meaningful. This reflects on the broader adtech industry more than InMobi specifically-- the number of people who've told me they need to get out of adtech is staggering. But even if you're working in a BS industry, it's nice to win and feel like your employer gives a crap about you.

1.0
Jul 15, 2014

Don't waste your time.

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The pros are all benefits to stop you from thinking about all the issues with management, company values, and professional development. Current pros are: catered lunch everyday, yoga, you can bring your dog to work, set up to work from home, immense flexibility in time that you come and go depending on your team, and hella snacks.

Cons

You will join wide-eyed and bushy-tailed, ready to take on work and prove yourself. They will take your drive and smash it into the ground. There is no appreciation of talent, which is why a majority has left. There has been at least 3 major re-organizations. You will not get promoted easily and if they do, they do it by giving you a title and no increase in compensation. They do not appreciate you as a person, just as another cog in the wheel that will get them closer to revenue goals. You will work all hours because they HQ in Bangalore for no regard to the working hours of other regions.

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Glassdoor has 1,213 InMobi reviews submitted anonymously by InMobi employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if InMobi is right for you.