The company does not have a sense of where to go, how to go there - Anonymous employee Mous Employee Review

1.0
19 Nov 2024
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

people are friendly global operations so you get to know lot of people from different nationalities

Cons

Management is more focused on blame than on support or development of employees. There is no feedback or guidance. The lack of empathy makes the culture very toxic. Functions working in silos and instead of fostering a collaborative environment, the founders are only focused on shooting videos. They take out schemes in which they pay people to leave positive reviews on Amazon so please don’t trust them. They may offer you a job but not a career. So think twice.

Explore other reviews about Mous

5.0
30 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great team, ambitious smart people!

Cons

Not many cons I can think of.

1.0
9 Dec 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

When I was at Mous, the people were genuinely great. The People team at the time did an excellent job recruiting individuals with shared values and strong work ethics, which created an enjoyable and collaborative working environment. The Product team is incredibly talented and has consistently delivered impressive, well-designed products. It’s unfortunate that more people won’t discover the brand’s potential because the leadership team lacks direction. This is reflected in the company’s repeated need to crowdfund year after year, despite being an established business that should have stronger financial stability and growth by now.

Cons

Leadership—particularly the CEO (JG)—shows clear favouritism toward a particular profile: white males with private-school backgrounds. There are multiple examples of hires fitting this description who progress rapidly through the company, receiving roles and promotions despite having significantly less relevant experience than others. The gender balance has shifted for the worse. Many women have left, and it’s not surprising why. As a woman, progression is extremely limited; you are far more likely to be held back than developed. Career growth feels reserved for those who fit the CEO’s preferred demographic. The culture of idea-sharing that once existed is gone. The Content team, led by one of JG’s favored individuals, receives seemingly unlimited resourcing, while the rest of the business is expected to achieve increasingly demanding targets with minimal support. This imbalance removes any sense of satisfaction or motivation from roles that were once fulfilling. Benefits are minimal. Maternity support is as basic as it gets, and bonuses are tied to unrealistic targets that were never likely to be reached.

3
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