Start up that has no Silicon Valley Culture... - Anonymous employee Lucid Motors Employee Review

3.0
19 Oct 2014
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Has some great talents working in organization Very experienced team that has delivered world class product before..

Cons

An open discrimination in this company. EDD should evaluate this company for salary discrimination. There are set of engineers referred by Sr Executive has a clear advantage of salary. As against people who work in G & A, HR, Finance has very low salaries as against industry standards. No work life balance, although a silicon valley company, works as high school timings, no working from home, no flexibility. The owners's relatives work here, so very dynasty kind of culture.

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5.0
20 June 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Give\nMe some where to go to every morning.

Cons

Not having the proper parts to continue to drive.

2.0
23 June 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The work itself is interesting if you’re into EVs, and the product is genuinely impressive on paper. Decent pay on entry.

Cons

The “startup energy” pitch is completely false advertising. Nearly every person in a decision making role came from a legacy OEM think Mercedes, BMW, Audi and they brought every slow, bureaucratic, politically charged habit with them. The result is a company that moves at legacy speed while pretending it’s moving fast. The Bay Area location is almost cosmetic. The actual workforce is heavily visa dependent, which creates real cultural fragmentation people aren’t here because they believe in the mission, they’re here because their visa is tied to the job. That affects collaboration, communication, and cohesion in ways that are hard to ignore day to day. Management is a revolving door. People move roles constantly musical chairs is the right metaphor. Nobody owns anything long enough to be accountable for it. Projects stall, priorities shift, and institutional knowledge evaporates. Budget priorities are baffling. Money gets burned on things that don’t matter while the actual important infrastructure, tooling, or resources get underfunded or ignored entirely. Work life balance exists in theory but the dysfunction means you’re constantly compensating for organizational chaos.

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