A wanna-be Keyence ruled by a stupid CEO who knows nothing about vision systems or science. - Sales Engineer Cognex Employee Review

1.0
Mar 12, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Guaranteed draw for the first 3 months upon joining the company - you get full 100% salary during this period. No other pros that I can think of.

Cons

Biggest con is this crazy CEO who does not understand the woes of his employees, and just cares about pleasing the investors and board members of the company just so he can enjoy sending stupid mails called Robservations on a weekly basis. FML. This company does nothing new but copy its competitors' (read Keyence) products and follow their way of working. The management knows nothing about the market/customers and they simply hire people from Keyence/Omron and run the business without providing them proper demo units. The company brags about collaboration time and again but the sales people and their managers won't share information with people working in the other territory fearing credit/commission sharing. Some of the markets are devastated due to so many pricing conflicts by improper partner/vendor handling by the DSMs. You'll come across politics in each and every step of the hierarchy in this so called "flat organisation". We all know there's nothing like a flat Earth and a flat organisation. The CEO just wants to impress the board members and the senior leadership team by bragging about everything, all while ignoring the efforts and pleas of those at the bottom of the hierarchy. The only way to succeed in this organisation is by (you guessed it right) licking the feet of your managers and celebrating them all the time by taking selfies and posting it everywhere like they were some movie stars or something. The company forces you to sign a non-smoking agreement, but quite ironically, almost everyone in the company smokes freely in the presence of other employees and during company gatherings. Oh. the company gatherings!! They are severely under-budgeted outings in the name of "Play Hard" events. They discuss team spirit and collaboration during the gatherings, only to return to office, forget everything, and start working with a selfish intent.

Explore other reviews about Cognex

5.0
Jun 16, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great benefits and awesome culture

Cons

Work very hard sometimes and it can be a bit much

2.0
Jun 29, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Talented and dedicated employees who genuinely care about the products and customers. Interesting technology and strong positions in several markets. Financially stable company with significant resources and the ability to invest for the long term.

Cons

The company still benefits from the reputation built during earlier periods of innovation, but there is a growing sense that preserving that reputation has become more important than adapting to current realities. Many employees want to improve processes, modernize how work gets done, and challenge long-standing assumptions, but meaningful change often struggles against an entrenched preference for maintaining the status quo. There is also a noticeable disconnect between messaging and action. The company talks extensively about culture, inclusion, and employee experience, but employees may find that these priorities become much quieter when external conditions change. Leadership and advancement opportunities can feel concentrated within long-established networks, leading to the perception of a persistent "inner circle" culture. Transparency is another challenge. Important business decisions and strategic shifts are often communicated incompletely or after the fact. Employees are frequently asked to absorb the impact of cost-cutting measures, limited raises, and repeated efficiency initiatives despite the company having substantial resources and continuing to emphasize profitability and margin performance. The result is a growing feeling that employees are carrying the burden of correcting strategic decisions made much higher in the organization. Many of the pressures facing employees feel financial and narrative-driven rather than operationally necessary. The company still has talented people, strong products, and the resources to remain a leader. The concern from many employees is not whether the business can succeed, but whether leadership is willing to invest in the people and organizational changes necessary to maintain that leadership position.

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