Blue Goji Reviews

2.7

34% would recommend to a friend

(12 total reviews)

Coleman Fung

49% approve of CEO

31% positive business outlook

Reviews by job title

12 reviews
1.0
3 Sept 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

There are very few reasons to work here, and even fewer if you plan on making major contributions to your LinkedIn profile. For every positive there is a negative... If you stay for a 12 hour day they'll provide you with lunch, dinner and coffee...not paid OT though (is this even legal?). There is paid vacation and sick time, but good luck getting vacation approved. If it is approved, then you better bring your laptop. The pay for developers would be considered competitive *if* it were normal 40hr weeks. The health insurance is good, covering dental and vision as well. The owner will offer you stock options, but for a company that seems to be going nowhere, it just seems worthless. They try to follow good agile development practices, but with the owner having urgent tasks and often, it de-rails the cycle.

Cons

The cons out weigh any pro, and with Austin being centered around a higher quality of life, this company belongs in a different region. You are *strongly* urged to work "optional" 12 hour days, and must be on-call over weekends. On normal 8 hour days, you MUST be there from 9am on-the-dot until 5pm, with no leeway to work from home. They run it as if you are in the banking industry, always needing to be there for customers...it is software development! Most of upper management is new to the company, and hasn't a clue about the direction of the current projects since the owner changes his mind every week. Speaking of new...most of the dev team are new hires, and any hire that had talent has been run off by poor decisions and being over-worked. The turnover rate here is awful! 50% of the company left within 3 months, and average employment time is about 8 months. Not only is the dev team new to the company, but majority of them are new to the industry or to their job description. And with all the new blood and strict management, any culture has left the company. The management doesn't care about the welfare of it's employees despite being a health company. Junk food is often served, coffee offered instead of green juice, mildewy water from the tap, long hours so no time for your workouts, and no time for stress-relieving vacation time because of unrealistic deadlines. As part of the dev team you will spend majority of your time in meetings, then will have to catch up on your real tasks on your own time or during unpaid overtime. I'll offer a good piece of advice: be a "Yes-man" to the owner...this will keep you on his good side and prevent you from entering the ring of one of his "yelling-matches". His ego and money will blur his vision often, leaving you to fulfill his wish at an unrealistic pace. The dev area is like a pit in a prison...it has a dark, quiet atmosphere where everyone works with headphones in and heads down, unless you are in a meeting room arguing. Again, not the type of atmosphere you'd expect to see in an Austin office.

1.0
25 Apr 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

... I'm trying not to sound hyperbolic or vicious or over the top or sarcastic in this review. I'm sure parts will come off that way anyway. I am trying to tell you, as a fellow user and reader of Glassdoor, in the strongest terms possible, that you almost certainly do not want to work for this company. Believe me, it would be better for my personal inner peace not to talk about or think about the leadership of this company at all; it is my hope that this will be the last time I'll need to. I would only recommend working at Blue Goji if you are a seriously codependent submissive masochist. Again, I realize that sounds like I'm making a joke or being a smartass. I am not. I mean that statement 100% literally.

Cons

Working at Blue Goji was pretty fun for quite a while. That was before the current CEO was CEO. He wasn't running things, and he didn't show up in person very often. He was still annoying, certainly; even then, he had a tendency to pop up after being silent for weeks, decide on the spot that he didn't like some body of work, or some decision that had been made long ago on which we had based large amounts of development, and veto it. (Even though technically at the time according to the corporate structure he had absolutely no authority to make business decisions directly, people have an annoying tendency to take orders from multi-millionaires.) Then we moved into the new (current, as far as I know) office, Mr. Fung was there every day, and things went downhill extremely rapidly. I left before Mr. Fung became CEO, but he essentially became in charge of everyone in the Austin office as soon as it opened. My departure was also before many of the most egregious tales of micromanagement described in the review "Serious Infrastructure Problems" occurred. I have received independent and more detailed confirmation that they did occur, however, and I certainly don't find them surprising. Stuff like that happened all the time. And yes, the office. The office is awful. It's like someone read the book _Peopleware_ or Joel Spolsky's article "A Field Guide to Developers" and then challenged themselves to design the absolute *worst* possible workplace for software developers to get anything done. ("Hey, here's an idea: why don't we not only not have private offices, but NOT EVEN HAVE CUBICLES? Brillant [sic], right?" "Well... I like it, but I think we can do better. Can we make the acoustics in the room really echoey so that anyone talking anywhere in the office is audible anywhere else and it sounds like it's been run through a reverb pedal?") Not to mention that it's just psychologically dehumanizing when your employer has you work in one corner of the warehouse he got to store his Ferraris; hard not to feel like you're just another one of his toys that he needs to put somewhere. There are other more minor negatives (like the location) about which I could grouse in more detail, but really the main problem is Mr. Fung. He seems to have these really specific ideas about how everything needs to work and cannot accept any deviation from that. Meanwhile, he doesn't understand the constraints of today's mobile technology; he thinks he does, but things have changed quite a bit since he made his millions in the early 80's. The sad thing, and the reason I felt obliged to write this review, is that if this were a more traditional startup that was bootstrapped or VC funded, poor management (not to mention poor marketing and a market space crowded with superior products) would have put this company out of business years ago. This abomination is just going to keep going as long as Mr. Fung insists on keeping it going. I know he's got recruiters aggressively trying to bring in more devs; I'm hoping to save a few of them from this.

2.0
10 Aug 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

On the positive side, the company has some awesome talent and great personalities, including marketing and sales guys, the Scrum Master, and about half of the Developers and Designers. Work life balance is good, with moderate flexibility. The owner is incredibly rich and won't run out of cash any time soon. The fitness-gaming product is rather nice.

Cons

Given this is such a small company, it's difficult to speak openly without revealing my identity. Unfortunately, there are also several major downsides. The office is an open-office, which is incredibly distracting. While the scrum master tries his hardest to keep things organized, requirements change significantly and often. Mentorship opportunities are are nonexistent, and advancement consists of more work without additional perks. Talent is regularly reassigned or TRICKED into to roles they're either ill-equipped for or uninterested in, such as ios/python to java/web, designer to product-manager, game-dev to app-dev, two leads (one had to 'surrender'), and backend to front-end. Three of our best developers left in the last six months, and the talent hired recently is ill-equipped to replace them. Most recently, several of our devs nearly completed the backend for a major new launch of one of our core products. When the owner saw the placeholder UI, he made them scrap the entire backend, and dragged them into about 4 weeks of meetings where they weren't allowed to code. Worse, the owner's pet names for components make absolutely no sense and contribute to confusion, such as "Reward Scheme" means "how users earn points." That is only one of many examples of terrible and confusing names.

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Glassdoor has 16 Blue Goji reviews submitted anonymously by Blue Goji employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Blue Goji is right for you.