Mujin Reviews

2.7

31% would recommend to a friend

(65 total reviews)

Issei Takino

93% approve of CEO

35% positive business outlook

Mujin has an employee rating of 2.7 out of 5 stars, based on 65 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Mujin employee rating is 30% below average for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

65 reviews
3.0
3 Aug 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I admit Mujin does have some upsides. - The company started 10 years ago in a niche market, and had big technology advantages 3 to 5 years ago. - Mujin’s products are aimed to improve logistics efficiency and benefit the society, so its intentions are good. - The tech people were from strong academic/industrial backgrounds. It is the first industrial job for most people here, and they have passion. - Most colleagues are nice, genuine, and pure. They don’t think much besides the job they are doing. - I have made some good friends here.

Cons

I left Mujin after I have considered many perspectives and imagined many possibilities of what Mujin will become. I can only give a few reasons below. For job applicants and candidates, please make sure you understand how Public Relations and Human Resources work: they show you the best about a company. I strongly suggest you reach out to former/current employees on the biggest career websites to get more (hopefully objective) opinions. Reviews on platforms like this are selected to some extent, so you still need to get first-hand materials elsewhere and hear other voices by yourself. When you receive an offer from Mujin, do make sure to exercise your right to request your contract, employment agreement, and all relevant documents, and ask HR questions. Before you make your final decision to join, responsibly take your time to do your surveys, and organize your other interviews well. (1) I don’t see myself having a good future career here. My managers don’t talk about my career path and my place here. I don’t feel my effort and contributions are adequately valued. When I joined, I believed Mujin had some unique technologies and could expand greatly in the market in scale. As a competent developer graduating from top universities with a high degree, I did my job great and fast with my unique skills, and improved so much in Mujin’s system. After one year and two, however, my compensation and employee rank still did not catch up with my contributions. During my evaluations, I was told a few times by the CTO to delay my satisfaction for a future salary boost and promotion. I argued I did not agree with his comments in my evaluation sheets, because they downplayed my achievements and contributions. “We do so to help you become a better engineer.”, he said, “Do better in the next 6 months, and I guarantee we will give you a decent pay raise and bonus.” I trusted him only in the first time. (2) Before COVID19, I sensed some management flaws. Then the COVID19 situation exposed many more management problems. Not until Covid did I fully understand in what an outdated way Mujin manages its employees. It simply cannot keep track of and evaluate our work progress without us being physically inside the office, sitting in front of managers and teammates. During the state of emergency (more than 1,000 positive cases in Tokyo), the top management still strongly encouraged employees to commute to the office (those living within 20 minutes’ commute must come). Although top management made some policy to allow some to work remotely, they actually pressured team managers to demand their teams to come. One manager even refused to review work progress when his teammate worked remotely, forcing him to commute after one day. Top management set up some seemingly detailed emergency plans during Covid, but executed very poorly when emergencies happened, like, some people working in office were tested positive. They only allowed early off-peak commute (7 to 8:30am) but no late off-peak, because top management wants to see everyone show up in the 8:45am stand-up. “Those who show up at 8:45 in the morning meetings always perform better”, CTO explained, “This is why Mujin succeeds”. (3) Knowing more about the industry, I have understood the company’s competitive advantages are waning. The technology was indeed advanced 3~5 years ago when the logistics automation fields were not mature enough. But in the past two years, so many other companies are picking up fast (pun) and closing up the technology gaps. They receive a good amount of investment funds, wisely use them to accumulate human capital, and adopt a modern management style, business directions, and marketing strategies. Compared to them, Mujin is relatively traditional and power concentrated. It can do some specific, specialized tasks very well, but the business model is difficult to scale, and so is its technology and the company size. These manifest the limitations in the company’s culture and value.

1.0
9 Dec 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The only real pro is the product itself. As mentioned in the headline, Mujin makes a 21st century product, and it has been a challenging and interesting product to work on.

Cons

To begin, Mujin is a company that is inexplicably split in two. The product side and business side work in separate areas with separate leadership. This leads to a sort of odd distrust and disdain between both sides that, while never becomes the focal point for any huge problems or crises, still pervades the company in the background. It impedes growth and unity, and serves little overall purpose. After 2+ years of time at the company, I've seen miscommunications, petty arguments, and general distrust arise from this split time and time again. One may think that for a high-tech startup with high-tech products, the working environment and management style would match. This is not at all the case. Whether you're on the product side under the CTO, or on the business side under the CEO, the company is run like a traditional domestic firm from bygone eras. All workers must be physically present (no telecommuting, no staggered hours, even during a pandemic.) Daily reports are delivered in-person, standing up, in a line like schoolchildren. If you are not in plain sight, then you surely are not working, and certainly cannot be trusted to work without the CTO or CEO over your shoulder. The common response to requests for flexible working hours or telecommuting is that efficiency will drop, and people will slack off. One then must ask, have you been hiring children, or responsible adults? Have you made any positive effort to explore flexible working styles without completely dismissing it as a wasted effort from the very start? This is the prime concern among your staff, who are worried about getting sick and having to use their own paid leave days to escape an office where so much "traditional" face-to-face interactions must occur. Again, much of this results purely from a highly controlling management who tends towards distrust of their own staff. My advice for management: the two heads of this fractured, split-in-two company have only minimal experience working in other companies prior to Mujin. Please consider getting outside consultants in to evaluate your business practises. This can only bring about improvements for yourself, your staff, and the company. People would like to work in a modern, flexible environment - one that matches the type of industry you're in. The company is slowly transitioning from a startup to an established business, however this transition will be long and painful until the CTO/CEO start placing a bit more trust in their own workers and adopt modern ways of thinking.

2.0
26 Jun 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

There are some positives to Mujin of course. The staff overall is very intelligent and comes from strong education backgrounds. Mujin's products are interesting and competitive. Most people there are friendly and helpful.

Cons

I left Mujin for another company in the same field, doing similar work. I now wish I had done it sooner, because Mujin was my first job in Japan and I thought that the working style of the company was similar at other companies, but I learned I was wrong about it. I do not want to focus too much on the Covid situation, but for me this was really the thing that made me finally realize the company does not have our health as a top priority. At Mujin, the management did everything possible to prevent people from having any flexible working style during the pandemic (and this is still the case now from what I heard from colleagues). Only when the government in Japan issues an "emergency" status, the company would reluctantly send people home, but even then I could not do so without upsetting my team and my manager. Yes, some changes were made in the office to spread people out a bit. But honestly, when most other 'modern' startups (even in robotics) are strongly promoting and encouraging work from home, why would anyone want to stay at Mujin? How will Mujin expect to retain a top talent when their competitors have working styles that adapt to recent changes in our society. It's actually a little bit embarrassing when I tell my friends and family about this. They think I worked at a "black company". Even my spouse was concerned about me. I believe the HR and related departments had wanted to do more to improve the situation at Mujin as well, but the top management in the company has an unhealthy obsession with seeing everyone onsite and watching everyone and everything. I think this is ironic because Mujin designs autonomous robots, and one of their company mottos is to relieve humans of manual labour. I got it in my head that most companies are the same. After switching companies now, I realize that this is not "normal". My current boss, and his boss too place enough trust in me to work independantly, and employees are not pressured to come to office. Trust is a two way street, and I feel like giving 100% in my work thanks to the trust between us. Sorry for the very long "cons". But after changing companies, I felt like I had an awakening.

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Glassdoor has 71 Mujin reviews submitted anonymously by Mujin employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Mujin is right for you.