Symbotic reviews

3.3

57% would recommend to a friend

(396 total reviews)
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Rick Cohen

59% approve of CEO

59% positive business outlook

Symbotic has an employee rating of 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 396 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Symbotic employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

396 reviews
2.0
Sep 8, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Non leadership colleagues are talented and genuinely collaborative, when given work and trusted to execute. Occasional opportunities to work with cross-functional teams that offer more professional respect and recognition.

Cons

HR leadership is highly micromanaging and distrustful. Projects are constantly reworked without explanation, and meaningful feedback is virtually nonexistent. There is no internal feedback culture. In over two years, I received more constructive and appreciative feedback during my two-week notice period from cross-collaborative partners than I ever did from my own leadership. Employees are often overlooked, underutilized, and expected to stay silent. The “keep your head down” mentality is prevalent and encouraged by leadership behavior. Leadership changes brought in individuals focused solely on self-promotion. Recognition or development of internal talent is rare, and promotions are minimal. Requests for growth or development are routinely ignored. The CHRO publicly claims to support talent development, but there's no visible or consistent investment in people. Feedback, if ever given, is often shared sparingly and part of a strategy to push people out and replace them with friends or former coworkers of current leaders. Middle managers either play into the same political game or are too afraid to advocate for their teams.

1.0
Dec 29, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Flexibility to work remotely (for software) during Covid.

Cons

Politics: The highly political sway of Walmart influence drives scary technical decisions --when you look at the decisions at the ground level there is a vast amount of malfunction. If you publicly voice a competing design or proposal, you find yourself shut down and marginalized. Symbotic's executive leadership comes from the grocery chain industry, not technology/engineering. As a result, the engineering language and impact is lost in translation. High Turnover: In less than a year, the entire interview team of 9+ people I interviewed with was gone. The only exception was the hiring manager, but that person transitioned into a different role. Additionally, the company is heavily leveraged in off-shore software consulting, which also plays a highly problematic role in the retention of key domain knowledge. Deep Technical Debt: The software stack used for >90% of the systems has long become obsolete or end of life. The nature of the monolithic software architecture makes it impossible to rectify since the extreme inter-coupling of systems requires massive, "big-bang" updates that are risky and error prone. The codebase is likely to remain this way indefinitely or until the company hires an external agency to rebuild it from the ground-up in parallel to maintaining the existing infrastructure. The system is a case study for Tracy Kidder's non-fiction work "The Soul of a New Machine".

4.0
Jan 21, 2018

There is some hope at last

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Promising technology, depth and breadth of engineering talent, even while significatly depleted recently, existing and potential customers ready to spend billions on Symbotic systems if things will work right. The recent assumption of the CEO role by the owner (so I've heard) shows that he really cares about the company. This is not a solution by itself, but a prerequisite for a positive change.

Cons

I've been at Symbotic for more than three years and left in 2017 when it seemed there is hardly any hope left. I've seen the previous leadership transition from Tony Affuso to Chris Gahagan. While Affuso wasn't a technology leader, he was respectful of talent and knew how to manage people. Gahagan's reign began with some promise, but after a few months turned into the most toxic and disrespectful environment I've seen in my career. Upper management (mostly Gahagan's cronies) has been the biggest problem for Symbotic in the last couple of years. They have no vision beyond slave-driving employees (who end up running away), blaming others for their own mistakes, and devising endless plans and "initiatives" that have very little relation to reality. I pity the next company that will hire Chris Gahagan for any kind of management role. As for Symbotic, if it could overcome his toxic legacy, it could be on the right path and fulfill at least some of its potential.

Viewing 13 - 15 of 396 Reviews

Glassdoor has 473 Symbotic reviews submitted anonymously by Symbotic employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Symbotic is right for you.