India centric company, good for learning and then quitting - Anonymous employee InMobi Employee Review

1.0
Jul 11, 2014
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Working in mobile; you can learn a lot at this company Free lunch and dog friendly Top notch marketing, sales and customer support to keep interest and hype around the company with poor products Good company to work for particularly in India

Cons

Highly India centric organization No stock options Poor salary and benefits compared to the industry (especially outside India) Too much politics, must drink the company cool aid with favoritism being rampant with founders No long term plans, company runs quarter on quarter and is penny wise, pound foolish Gimmicky HR - like promising a Harley or a BMW; no real HR in the company Poor business ethics and integrity Non performing products that are not competitive Lots of Mckinsey consultant types with poor product management (most being first timers with no real product experience) and engineering that is disconnected from customers in the US and Europe (since everyone is in India) You need to slog 24*7 to get anything accomplished; absolutely no work life balance People quit in droves out of frustration every single year - revolving door particularly in US and Europe

Explore other reviews about InMobi

5.0
Apr 5, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

They do look out for you financially and hitting goals (roughly) each quarter, well respected among leadership, like the people I work with

Cons

You definitely have to be a self starter and good at working in a place with many changes fast

1.0
Dec 12, 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Colleagues were smart, collaborative, and supportive. They made the day-to-day challenges more manageable and and always willing to help each other succeed. - Daily lunches in the office were a nice perk and helped reduce personal expenses. - Competitive pay. Decent benefits.

Cons

- Performance management processes are frequently applied inconsistently and without clear intent to develop or support employees. Rather than fostering growth or providing actionable coaching, the process is often used as a tactic to manage people out, particularly when accommodations or personal advocacy are involved. - Leadership sometimes promotes a culture of control over collaboration. New managers can come in and assert authority without first understanding team dynamics, established workflows, or communication norms. This creates unnecessary friction, mistrust, and dysfunction. - Micromanagement and punitive practices are often disguised as professional development, but lack true coaching or mentorship. Issues like formatting or phrasing are escalated to HR-level concerns, while real systemic problems go unaddressed. Employees who speak up or ask clarifying questions are often penalized instead of supported. - Employees returning from medical leave are especially vulnerable. Instead of creating a supportive reintegration plan, some leaders choose to document routine issues as performance failures, ignoring broader context. This feels retaliatory and designed to build a paper trail rather than help employees succeed. - HR does not function as an impartial resource. Employee concerns are routinely brushed aside, and when legal risks arise (ex: related to medical disclosures), severance and extended benefits are offered as a way to avoid potential claims, not as a gesture of goodwill. - Leadership culture is rooted in fear and internal politics. Decisions often appear politically motivated, prioritizing optics over ethics or accountability. - Some managers lack proficiency in basic tools (e.g., Excel, Teams, reporting systems), but still micromanage and penalize employees for unclear or minor issues. - In-office policy is inconsistent and unfair. Employees are expected to be in the office five days a week while others, including some senior leaders, work fully remote. This undermines morale and eliminates flexibility. - Career development is stagnant. There is no mentorship culture, no clear growth path, and performance feedback is often vague or retroactive. - Systems and tools break frequently with little urgency to fix them. Internal processes are clunky, reporting is unreliable, and cross-functional collaboration is poor. Meetings often lack follow-through or leadership accountability. - Policies are not applied evenly, and there are legitimate concerns about how employee issues are handled. There is little trust in HR, and many decisions feel legally questionable or ethically troubling.

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