Tech IndustryApr 14, 2020
QualcommEAJw78

Working at Niantic

can people who have worked at Niantic that are currently working at 9 to share their experience and the work culture overall within the company? How's the leadership, engineering org. and overall comp? #niantic #ar #vr #career

Amazon hwjfbiwb Apr 15, 2020

+1 and if you can share location and perks if any

Niantic Yicd09 Apr 16, 2020

I'm very happy with comp; Niantic generally makes strong offers relative to the rest of the industry. The company is stingy in a bunch of petty ways, like not reimbursing noise cancelling headphones when we were at the office, and some more significant ones, like not hiring the number of people we need to execute on our initiatives, but that doesn't change the fact that they pay well. One upside of being so conservative is that we have a lot of money in the bank to weather COVID. Extreme measures to preserve cash are unlikely in the near future, if the execs make rational judgments. Work culture varies by team but is generally quite relaxed and positive. The company spun out of Google and retained a lot of the Google culture, including not driving particularly hard towards deadlines or releases. This is both a good and a bad thing - good for work life balance and mental stability, bad for launching rapidly. Most engineers are talented and friendly, but upper management is poor - most of the people in power at the company were selected on the basis of their affiliation with John Hanke and not for their leadership competence, and it shows in the decision making and lack of transparency from the top. Some of the things we do are just weird, and the leadership not listening to people kind of came to a head and did damage to the company during the Harry Potter launch. So far I have yet to see anything disproving the idea that they had a single lucky game and aren't capable of bringing anything else to market, but that game rakes in so much that we've been able to paper over that fact. I'd say join if you're looking to learn some engineering, work with smart peers, and still have a life. You'll enjoy the experience. Just don't have too many expectations about the long term growth of the company. I don't think it's going to dramatically shrink, but I also don't see much more growth. Locations: SF is the mothership and has an awesome view of the Bay. In some ways it seems more of the work goes on in SVL, which isn't as nice looking an office but is very conveniently located in Sunnyvale's downtown area near a lot of shops and restaurants and right across from the Caltrain. Their Bellevue office is in a high rise building with a nice view of the mountains and also a convenient location. That office is more lightly staffed than the others. I can't say much about our Tokyo, London, or LA offices, but LA's conference rooms always look amazing in our videoconferences. Perks: we get the standard ones, plus a few extras. Good health insurance, life, 401(k) (don't believe there's much of a match), disability, etc. Free lunches from Zerocater (decent but don't expect it to be as good as Google/FB's food) and snacks always available; no breakfast or dinner. We get fitness, phone, and Internet reimbursements, as well 6 free mental health consults and free fertility services.

Amazon hwjfbiwb Apr 16, 2020

Thanks for your detailed review! What would you say about the dozens of people who leave really negative reviews of the company? Also if you can, which roles do you think are best managed or have good WLB? I am looking at Bellevue roles - Platform server infra, server core infra, or server infra?

Niantic zSXu04 Apr 18, 2020

Not sure why you say SVL does more than the SF office; the single biggest team in that office was over a year late in shipping its first feature and it performed badly. The other teams are alright but not necessarily any more productive than the SF teams. Bellevue office had about the same number of people as SVL, but has more space, so it seems less populated. I think every company has negative folks and they tend to be more vocal on things like blind and Glassdoor. So don't read too much into it. Niantic has a lot of problems and a lot of the things people write have some basis in truth, but show me a company that doesn't have problems.