Anatomage reviews

3.0

54% would recommend to a friend

(21 total reviews)

Jack Choi, Ph.D.

45% approve of CEO

57% positive business outlook

Reviews by job title

21 reviews

Reviews about "Compensation"

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1.0
Aug 10, 2025

Profit over people

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Zero Pros. Higher ups lie to your with a straight face.

Cons

Horrible culture, all about profitability. They will fire you in a day with no explanation. Bad benefits for Startup, that’s making so much money. Very low pay too.

1.0
Jan 16, 2025

No. Not worth it.

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Compared to other jobs I've had, there were no advantages. Previous jobs and my current job were simply better in every way (pay, culture, benefits, leadership, and mission statement).

Cons

No. Don't do it. You can do better. You deserve better. The other reviews have told you about the CEO and CFO and their complete dedication to poor culture. To keep it short: it's all true. But when you're actually working for them, it's even worse than words can describe. It's toxic. It violates every best practice of management and culture. They just don't know what they're doing. But to give you a better sense, here are things I ACTUALLY was told by high level management during my time there. They're all bad but some are legitimately hilarious how bad they are. 1. "Bad products sell". Well, they didn't say "bad". They said a worse word I can't say here. You get it. They're not interested in making good products, or even okay products. They're not actually interested in helping people learn or having a positive impact on the world. They are interested in money. This is a sales organization that makes poor quality products quickly and sells them at extreme prices. A good company values and invests in good work. If doing good work matters to you, run away from here. Git! 2. "Do not train your team members". This is verbatim, word for word what I was told. When I started as a manager, it was critical to me to train my team, especially the newer recruits with limited or no experience (the company specializes in hiring low-level talent with no experience so they can keep salaries low). I was explicitly told not to spend time training my team because "they might leave and we'd waste our time and energy", or "we don't have time because we're on a tight deadline". I even asked for funds and/or time for professional development to train my team to do what they were being asked to do. It was a hard no. If you're a manager, you will NOT be given space to train your team to do a good job. So, if you're a new recruit, you will not be given training. This is a terrible system that led to huge conflicts with team members. They were expected to do good work fast, but never given the actual training required. And as a manager with experience, I was expected to deliver results while relying on an untrained, inexperienced, novice team. If you like working at a place that has clear expectations, cares about you developing professionally, or gives you the support you need to do the job, run. Run as fast as your little legs can go! 3. "We understand there is flooding on the highways, high winds today, and reported obstructions on the roads. This is a chance to remind you to take your car in to be serviced so it can handle these conditions. All employees are required to come in to work today." This was an actual email from the CEO to all Santa Clara employees. For a few days, the Bay Area had a severe weather front come through causing dangerous road conditions. Many schools closed and other companies went remote for the day. The news and signs on the road were telling you to stay home if you could. What did our CEO do? Told us we should take our car in to be serviced that day so we could come into work. Like most bad managers, Jack Choi believes firmly in micromanagement. It's what people who don't know how to hire well, manage well, or train their employees have to resort to. It even means that when severe weather hits and it's dangerous to drive, he thinks that good management means you need to be sitting in your depressing cubicle under fluorescent lights to work. 4. "We have to root for Korea's soccer team. It's Jack's team". During the World Cup, the CFO actually told my team that we should be Korean soccer team fans because the CEO is Korean. This was not a joke. This place lives in fear of the CEO. Everyone walks on egg shells. The CFO is just trying to please the CEO. This would all just be funny or weird, until you realize that the CFO handles salary conversations, and seems to dictate resolution of all HR issues. You have no outs at this company. The CFO is the "yes" man of the CEO. It's sad to watch but also means you will never have a source of support. It feels a bit like a cult? Like a dictatorship? Like a something. But it's not normal. If you want to be your own person, be able to like the soccer teams you like, or feel free to speak your mind even if it's not aligned with management, run. Or fly away. Whatever is faster! So, why did I join in the first place? During my interview, the CEO convinced me that he DID care about product quality. He, along with my direct manager, told me I WOULD have time to train my team. In fact, I was told I'd have full control (verbatim) over the team, decisions, projects, and their training. No training allowed. They said there were COUNTLESS opportunities for professional development. There weren't. Don't let the interview persuade you. Remember: this is a sales organization. They will say (but not do) anything to get you to buy the product/join the company. Join literally ANY other company. I joined from another large tech company because they sold me. They actually threw good money at me. But it was not even close to making up for how unhappy I and everyone I knew there was. If you're experienced, they'll offer you a decent salary. It should be WAY more for what they'll ask you to do. If you're inexperienced, they'll low ball your salary. It should be WAY more for the stress you'll take on trying to keep your head afloat. Joining Anatomage was the worst professional decision I ever made. Resigning and leaving it behind was the best. You'll find a job somewhere else. Keep looking. Run.

2.0
Dec 5, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Very cool, cutting-edge technology, great customers, kind colleagues

Cons

If you are in outside sales, they cut corners to save money every chance. If you exceed your goals, there is no reward for strong performance or recognition. Instead, we were met with not only increased targets for the following year (this is standard), but a major pay cut that they said would be to pay for additional marketing funds and employees (who were then never hired). Despite all of the sales folks covering conference demonstrations and following up on these deals + spending many nights away from home, the senior leadership categorized these activities as marketing-driven, and gave many of the sales credits to the marketing team in order to justify the new sales pay structure/pay cuts (though I doubt the marketing team even saw a pay raise for this either- just a good excuse to cut pay for the outside sales folks). The new pay structure that we were rewarded with was not getting paid on any deals until we hit a pretty sizeable threshold of our quarterly target with $0 of backpay for the work that we did. They constantly change your geographies so any deals you have worked on for a long time (sales cycle is at least a year for most) then get passed off to others. For anyone hired as a junior rep, it was clear the goals for both promotion and eventual commission were constantly changed, making it unclear in the end how anyone had a path to promotion. During my time, they changed their roles from having outside customer sales-focused interaction to troubleshooting and customer care - not the job description that they eagerly signed up for. The company tells prospective employees that there is a 401k match, but the vesting schedule is 6 years so if you are there less than that, you get absolutely $0 of that match - this was so poorly explained during onboarding because the HR department is almost non-existent (though the HR folks are kind people - they are also short staffed). The HR department is also merged with the CFO so there really are no "checks and balances" and any complaints really go nowhere. The company is run by a sole proprietor, so anything he says goes and any feedback from middle level managers does not really influence the top-down decisions... I don't think any lasting change will happen until the leadership changes. During conferences, we were asked a few times to stay in horrible hotels and even airbnbs in order to meet the company low-cost requirements - this was really troubling in high-cost cities for meals as well (and also unbelievable given the massive profits and positive financial position the company is in). They also did not reimburse for water bottles purchased at conferences for the booth/didn't slot this in their marketing budget - how is that even allowed if water is a necessity? They are now asking for pre-approval for all reps to drive far distances in their territories to visit customers which discourages hands-on activities. Their technical support people are really incredible, but so short staffed I'm not sure how they keep their heads above water and the tables often have issues that require a lot of troubleshooting. Looking ahead, as most of the funding seems to come from government grants that are gifted to schools (which increased a lot post COVID-19), I think outside sales pay will be very much at risk if there are major cuts to the Department of Education in 2025 and beyond (outside of any of the cuts the senior leaders already have planned for them).

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