Rakuten reviews

3.6

71% would recommend to a friend

(3,534 total reviews)
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Hiroshi Mikitani

78% approve of CEO

56% positive business outlook

Rakuten has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 3,534 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Rakuten employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Tecnologia da informação industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

4K reviews
1.0
Nov 22, 2014
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

- You need to make a concerted, focused purposeful effort to get fired. Basically once you are in - you're in. - Currently in a transition period from legacy systems to new-and-shiny. Lets of projects going on with lots of new opportunities to work on different things at a large scale. - Free breakfast and lunch for all employees. Cafeteria design is very nice and stylish. - Generally nice people, you will enjoy going out after work with some of them. The managers are very patient when onboarding you into the team. - Working at Rakuten definitely will open many doors for you in Japan. Everyone knows the company (and a large percentage use it regularly). With Rakuten being so big in Japan its definitely helpful when trying to do things like applying for credit, mortgage or getting a salary bump when you eventually leave the company. Additionally, company PR is on point - it will seem international to the outside world. - Perfect environment for type A personalities also If you grew up in a culture that is more “rigid” or hierarchical (ex. Japan, India) you will find that Rakuten will be positive balanced experience then you are used to. - They speak English at all major internal meetings - The corporate birthday party for all staff that falls within a date range - very nice and enjoyable (but mandatory)

Cons

As a pre-note the following applies to Japan (Tokyo and branch offices), but i'm sure the subsidiaries are feeling the pain. I waited for 3(ish) months before posting this as I wanted a clear / balanced perspective. I know open layout is the de-facto default plan at many companies in Japan however - this place feels like the Ministry of Truth from 1984. There are also far too many people for the space provided. Extra points to see how many people you infect when you come to work sick. We are crammed in so close as to feel the body heat of the adjacent people - I've never felt so claustrophobic before. Join Rakuten with the expectation of no personal space or privacy. Expect to drink the Rakuten koolaid or be ostracized by management. The cult of personality is very strong here. Expect most people to treat the CEO as if he is the second coming of the savior and the “Rakuten Shugi” is the bible. Expect to be required to install Rakuten apps on your personal devices (also strictly enforced). Constructive criticism is not welcomed - it is seen as complaining and thus ignored. They even went to far as to get rid of Yammer a while back to silence employees. Everything is a KPI, everything requires a document, approval, attendance record or a long list of convoluted rules. Micro-management and shaming tactics (for the smallest of clerical mistakes) are taken to an Olympic levels here. I frequently thought “Resistance is futile” when dealing with most things. Your desk must be clean - no personal effects in or around it. Desk and chair cleaning (even the chair wheels) every Monday by staff - strictly enforced. The company culture is extremely impersonal. If the building was hit by a comet, at most I would have lost a box of tissues in my desk. It gives off the feeling of you being part (cog) of the larger machine that is indifferent to your humanity (which they are). The company PR department is good - which is bad for you. The website has many foreign nationals posing for pictures telling you how good it is. Those people are either a) Executive Level b) Management Level c) Gone. It gives the illusion of a flexible progressive workplace, for which it is the exact opposite. If you want to get promoted you need to speak, act and preferably be Japanese. While you might see many non-Japanese during your time here, the majority of those individuals are not in management. As a non-Japanese, there are a (very) few ways to get promoted upward. Basically the requirements are politicking (brown-nosing) with executives, or being heavily connected in Silicon Valley or with Harvard / HBS. If you fall outside that sphere - the best of luck to you. Additionally, I must give an honorable mention to the completely incomprehensible elearning that everyone is required to take for promotion - no exceptions. The entire thing (100s of pages of presentation and several tests) is machine translated from Japanese. It wouldn't be so bad, but they outright refuse to fix nor acknowledge it as being a problem. Semi-ok food but they have absurd limits on lunch (like only two baby tomatoes, one spoon of lettuce, 3 meatballs etc.). Word has it Rakuten low-balled the caterer on the contract which in turn shows in the quality of the food. Do not expect to have training, joining parties or events, or some travel expenses paid for you. The company is cheap - and everything comes out of your pocket. While they will reimburse you for required travel, understanding the reimbursement process is like filing multi-year tax complicated forms to the National Tax Agency without a CPA. Best of luck with that. Did I mention the stupid menial tasks? If so, it requires its own section. Expect to have irrelevant documentation, attendance, useless KPIs and PowerPoints to take of 25% of your day. Bikeshedding and other useless minutia in meetings will take up another 30%+ of your time and 90% of your sanity. As another poster said “Caveat emptor” for which I wholeheartedly agree. If you still decide to join or not is your personal decision. However, if you do I suggest getting a DETAILED breakdown of your compensation package. Rakuten likes to play “semantics” with peoples money. One glaring example - the “bonus” (deferred salary) is actually a large percent of stock options that only vest after a half a decade; however, it is still listed as cash in the joining email they send you. Just do your due diligence to avoid any “regretful misunderstandings” later.

1.0
Feb 13, 2018

Can't believe it

Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

Decent benefits Weekly updates Easy commute

Cons

High turnover from management and employees Lack of trust and paranoia from all levels Rigid management structure with lots of office politics

1.0
Oct 29, 2015

Awful culture, terrible management, and no career development.

Anonymous employee
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

-If you put in a few months at Rakuten, you can probably get a job at a much better company. -You might meet some talented people and make good friends/connections.

Cons

First, some background- I am a foreigner who was working at the Japanese HQ in a business unit, not an engineer. I was a mid-career hire (not a new grad) who came in with about 5 years experience in my field. Rakuten has a miserable company culture. From insane levels of micro-management, expected and unpaid overtime work, extremely low pay with barebones benefits (the legal bare minimum of paid time off, zero retirement benefits, no work from home, etc.), to being given responsibilities that actually amount to a step backwards in your career, spending the working day at Rakuten was a very negative experience. Oh, and when you join the company, you get absolutely nothing- no garbage can, no notebook, not even a single pen. Rakuten takes zero effort in making new employees feel welcome, and it's no wonder the turnover is so high. At the beginning of my career there, I was told to, "Be sure to stay overtime a few times a week, just to show your manager that you are engaged in your job." In this way, results don't matter at Rakuten. What matters is just sitting at your desk, and being there physically (even if, like a majority of the company, you are simply wasting time chatting with other coworkers on Viber). You aren't promoted for your efforts, but are instead promoted every six months (by an insulting amount of around 8000 yen a month) simply for staying at Rakuten. Rakuten is such a bloated organization with so much redundancy that large numbers of the workforce don't do anything all day (except Viber, Facebook, etc.). If you want to do nothing all day, Rakuten may be a good place for you. It is not a good place for people who are motivated to develop their careers and gain new experiences. Additionally, you can't move up because the clueless middle managers don't support you, don't give you initiatives to evolve your career, and really don't give any direction at all. They are only managers because they have been at Rakuten physically for several years. Upper management, on the other hand, is almost always hired externally. Employees will almost never move up in the organization, and this is even more true for non-Japanese employees. You are never rewarded for doing a good job, but are scolded to almost laughable amounts if you make a mistake. As one example, I forgot to lock my desk once before going home. My superior then felt it was appropriate to: 1) message me on Viber on a Friday night telling me I forgot to lock my desk, 2) bring it up at the morning team meeting on Monday, 3) send an email to me, CCing my team members and boss, saying that I forgot to lock my desk, and 4) place a piece of paper with "CLOSE!" written in red letters inside of my desk. All for one fairly benign mistake. Just one example of how Rakuten treats its employees like children, does not trust any of their employees (security cameras ALL OVER the office spaces/cafeteria/everywhere), and makes working there miserable in general. Lots of gossip, slander, and backstabbing at Rakuten. Managers will steal your ideas so that they get credit. One lady in upper management openly talks about employees' salaries, brags about her own salary and how much her MBA cost (she told me $200K USD), spreads rumors about other employees, and engages in name calling regularly. I could go on and on with more examples, but this post would become much too long. And among all of this, they tried to implement something called the "Smile Project." Indeed, the CEO thinks that all of the problems at his company can be solved by getting employees to greet each other by fist bumping. This is not a joke! They even have reminders in the elevators to please fist bump each other, but in elevator-friendly silence. The real icing on the cake is listening to the CEO at the Tuesday morning asakai meetings. While Rakuten's employees are getting paid far, far below the industry average, employees are "privileged" enough to watch live streams of the CEO's unfocused, meandering, broken-English reports from and bragging about his home in Silicon Valley, his suite in New York, etc., etc. A terrible company that I can only recommend as a stepping stone to joining a better company after putting in 6 months to a year of enduring this awful place.

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