Makerbot reviews

3.1

49% would recommend to a friend

(213 total reviews)
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Nadav Goshen

66% approve of CEO

39% positive business outlook

Makerbot has an employee rating of 3.1 out of 5 stars, based on 213 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Makerbot employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Manufacturing industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

213 reviews
1.0
Sep 8, 2014

I've quit better jobs than this!

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

We get fresh fruit once a week, I think. It's like a real life Dilbert cartoon. Lots of opportunity to learn cost down methods.

Cons

DO NOT EXPECT: training, professional development, enrichment, continuing education, career advancement or promotion. As Makerbot sees it "You are lucky to even work for us!" Consider this the red flag. Retaliation: any attempt to speak up against your manager is considered an offense. Even simple disagreements on technical matters are considered a strike on your record. Regardless if you are right or wrong, HR will be contacted and you will begin the road to termination. (Let's be serious there is no way any hastily hired manager can be wrong in a cutting edge tech industry in Makerbot's opinion!) It is the key reason our engineering department is a husk of itself. And subsequently, why our new products are garbage, citing the Amazon BUYER reviews to back up this claim. Makerbot time: The irony of an earlier post is that they forgot to fully define the term "Makerbot time". To quote the Simpsons in a true case of life imitating art, makerbot time is the wrong way just faster. Essentially, doing the work in the quarter of the time. Then because you skipped testing or lack understanding you break the whole system the following week. In turn, spending the following two weeks trying to fix your mistake. Product team: When product management is no longer proud of their developments; the end is near. As of mid-summer there are more product and project "managers" than engineers, which equates to not enough people creating. The team as a whole, can't not set a deadline and stick with it to save their lives. All of this coupled with weak leadership within the group; they are basically doomed. Marketing team: Marketing basically is nonexistent, no explanation and I don't understand how it's is possible. HR: The only skill they have is to fire subordinates who do not follow managers' orders. "When the only tool you have is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail" describes this team perfectly. They may have minored in writing fake Glassdoor reviews; judging by the amount of short 5 start posts that lack to describe the "greatest work environment in my 20+ years." Politics: an autocracy. This is a requirement to play along if you want to remain employed, which forces everyone to silo up around their VP. Don't expect to be promoted unless you "know" a VP or C level. Coworkers: mostly fresh out of school. Anyone with >3 years out of school is probably wildly incompetent and/or took the position out of desperation. A lot of the previous reviews mention smart people being here, but that's just not true anymore. The product time lines are too aggressive and too complicated for the workforce. Pay: Expect 60% of market value. MakerBot takes the view that employees are just inputs and can find someone cheaper elsewhere. Open positions often go to the lowest "bidder" in terms of salary; which generates a lot of dead weight coworkers who you will be expected to carry on projects and incompetent managers who simply frustrate whole groups because they are only concerned about "preserving their great jobs in NYC." No performance reviews: when you negotiate salary, they say you'll be reviewed for a pay increase after your 90 days (or some other BS like that), and it never happens. Expect to take more responsibility with no pay or title increase because both of those instances would prove that an employee has value or that a manger can't handle their workload. There is almost no upward mobility, which extends to both our blue and white collar workers. 90 day rule: you can be fired randomly in the first 3 months with little to no explanation. Management takes its at-will employment clause very seriously. Culture: Non-existent culture on good days and toxic on bad days. Constant blame game and finger pointing because it's easier to blame another department than yourself. At times it seems like a demilitarized zone when groups conflict and everyone choses sides. Those who do not speak up or point the blame, take the fall for poor products or features. No work life balance. The work place is volatile day to day, never sure when a colleague will out right quit or be fired with out any notification to the rest of the team/ group. You should only want to work here if: 1 - You are fresh out of school. 2 - Your parents work here and hired you. 3 - You have a sugar daddy/mamma and want to hang out with engineers. 4 - You are homeless and need place to be during the day. 5 - You owe people money; a lot of money.

1.0
Nov 3, 2015

Toilet company with toilet future.

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

They make 3D printers. That's kind of cool. They sometimes work. Also, your co-workers will amaze and inspire you until they day they are arbitrarily jettisoned by toilet upper management.

Cons

The dream of a mass-market 3D printer built on a robust, well-tested, and open-source platform was sold out to SSYS and their myopic shareholders, who proceeded to flush the dream down the toilet.

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Makerbot Response
10y
Thanks for your feedback. We also believe 3D Printers are pretty cool, and we have some truly amazing and inspiring employees.
1.0
Aug 5, 2014

Absent New Leadership, No Hope For MakerBot

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

3D printing is an important technology and you get to be part of it all. You'll work with some of the finest people you'll ever meet. So many people at MakerBot are unhappy because of their jobs, so you will quickly obtain good drinking buddies. The widespread unhappiness will reassure you that you're not the problem. Free fruit?

Cons

What reason do you have for joining a company? To further your career? To work on making and selling great products? To pull down a decent paycheck? To work in a fun, open environment with great perks? MakerBot fails on every one of these points. -Unless you have a personal connection to someone in a leadership position, there is no career path for you here. Few employees are truly empowered to make a difference, most are hamstrung by leadership. It’s likely that you won’t be with the company long enough to see a pay increase, let alone get a major promotion. -Well meaning engineers are limited by poor product planning and are forced to make compromises in quality so that MakerBot can make a few more bucks per unit sold. Marketing is forced to outright deceive customers, completely divorcing themselves from reality in order to sell a few more units or generate a few more leads. Salespeople are not allowed to use the products they sell, because they wouldn’t be able to make a sales pitch with confidence if they saw how poorly they functioned. Support staff is overworked and morale is low because customers are sold products that are known to fail at rates higher than any sane company would allow. -Salaries across the board have always been insultingly low, even after the merger. If you work in the corporate office, grab a free banana and enjoy the view. It’s the only perk you’ll receive. If you work in the factory, put that banana down and get back to work. Decisions made by leadership for the past year have been obsessively focused on making short-term gains in order to meet sales goals related to performance-based earn-out bonuses, the vast majority of which would go to them. As it turns out, when you rush three products to market before they are ready, people tend to return them and demand their money back! That's the kind of poor, reckless leadership you’ll experience at MakerBot, and it trickles down to every department.

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Glassdoor has 231 Makerbot reviews submitted anonymously by Makerbot employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Makerbot is right for you.