Shakudo Reviews

2.4

30% would recommend to a friend

(40 total reviews)

24% positive business outlook

Shakudo has an employee rating of 2.4 out of 5 stars, based on 40 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there.

Reviews by job title

40 reviews
1.0
16 Dec 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

None, I'd rather be unemployed in this economic climate than work here.

Cons

I joined this company expecting to work as an engineer. Instead, I was promoted to immediately to "Software Magician", expected to perform technical miracles by converting loosely structured, AI generated, vibe coded ideas into something that could survive in production. Shakudo markets itself as a software engineering company, yet day to day it feels dominated by layers of management rather than engineering. There are noticeably more people overseeing the work than actually building it. Engineers are treated as interchangeable resources, valued more for their ability to absorb chaos than for their technical judgment or craftsmanship. Much of the work begins as “vibe coded” output created without real engineering discipline. Management appears enthusiastic about producing quick demos and ambitious promises, often relying on AI generated code that looks convincing on the surface but falls apart under real use. Stabilizing, rewriting, and maintaining this code becomes the engineers’ responsibility, and nightmare as it is usually under tight and unrealistic deadlines. Technical reality is routinely sidelined. The priority is speed, not quality, sustainability, or long term viability. Poor planning and constant deadline pressure force teams to cut corners simply to keep things moving. The result is rushed, fragile software that everyone recognizes as problematic, along with a growing pile of technical debt that engineers are expected to carry indefinitely. Accountability rarely travels upward. When systems fail or customers are impacted, responsibility is always redirected downward. Engineers are left to clean up the consequences of weak planning, overpromising, and decisions made without sufficient technical grounding. Morale reflects this environment. Engineers talk about quitting the same way they talk about taking a lunch break. Casually, frequently, and without hesitation. That is, when lunch breaks are taken at all. Time is tightly monitored, with lunch expected to fit neatly into a short, fixed window, while overtime is treated as a normal and ongoing expectation rather than an exception. The imbalance is noticeable and contributes heavily to burnout. Pager duty amplifies these problems. Being on call means responding to frequent production issues caused by disorganized systems and poorly structured code, much of it created outside core engineering teams. Documentation is minimal, ownership is unclear, and little feels intentionally designed or well maintained. There is a strict expectation to acknowledge pages within minutes at any hour, with company messaging tools repeatedly pinging until you do. Ironically, engineers are then held responsible for cleaning up everyone else’s messes, spending more time reacting to preventable failures than fixing root causes or improving the systems. Overall, this is a workplace where burnout is common, engineering is undervalued, and accountability is consistently avoided, so anyone who cares about building quality software, working in a structured environment, or being treated as a professional should think very carefully before joining. And given the culture around control and reputation management, I would not be surprised if this review quietly disappears, which would be a fitting reflection of my experience here.

1.0
15 June 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

This place does allow you to explore different opportunities and use various tools to see what you like. And other than that, nothing else. Which you can do that at home yourself.

Cons

1. The work-life balance here sucks. Management is a mess—just throwing random tasks on a board and expecting them to get done. Engineers barely get a say. 2. This place isn't really a tech company; it's more like a dev shop churning out flashy demos for the CEO to show off. Hardly any real engineering work happens. 3. Most of the work is random client stuff with no real value. Don't buy into the "building interesting stuff" hype—it's just a dev shop cranking out sales materials to snag clients. 4. Policies flip every week, and half the time, employees aren't even in the loop. 6. The on-call schedule is a joke, changing every month. On-call means working 24/7 for free, not just handling system maintenance. 7. The managers have zero real dev experience. They're either clueless or just researchers with degrees. Bottom line, steer clear of this place. You'll get burnt out with nothing to show for it, except maybe trying out a bunch of different tools because they're all over the place.

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Shakudo Response
2y
Thank you for the feedback. We will learn from it and find ways to improve. Regarding point 2: demos are unfortunately necessary to sell any product, and great demos are what get our customers excited before they have a chance to access the Shakudo OS. We certainly yearn for a day when demos are magically created by AI, but until then, it is our amazing team that creates the demos while continuing to build powerful features.
1.0
26 Aug 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

There are decent snacks and some nice people.

Cons

As someone who has worked at several venture-backed startups, this is by far the worst. Sure, startups are a lot of work, but they are also a lot of fun, unlike Shakudo. Here are my issues with Shakudo: - Intense micromanagement. - Lack of trust from leadership. - Mandatory in office policy with only a few WFH days allowed per year, but this rule does not apply to one of the co-founders who regularly works from home. - You need to use vacation time if you are going to an appointment, even though everyone works overtime. - Job descriptions do not align to what the job actually is. - Inexperienced management. - You are often given tasks that add no value. - Lots of turnover and there are regularly layoffs within the three-month probation period. For example, three out of four BDRs that were hired left the company within three months of joining. - Management and founders do not make an effort to get to know their staff. I once asked the CEO what he did for fun and he responded by saying "all I do is work". - I regularly would hear the founders arguing with one another. Please, go work somewhere else, Shakudo doesn't even pay its employees well.

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Shakudo Response
1y
Thank you for taking the time to share your feedback. We genuinely value all input, both positive and negative, as it helps us grow and improve as a company. We are truly sorry to hear that your experience at Shakudo did not meet your expectations. Our goal is to create a workplace where every employee feels valued, trusted, and empowered. While we strive to achieve this, we acknowledge that we may not always get everything right, and we are committed to addressing any areas of concern. Your feedback is invaluable to us as we work to make the necessary improvements, and we wish you all the best in your future endeavors.
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Glassdoor has 41 Shakudo reviews submitted anonymously by Shakudo employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Shakudo is right for you.