Exploiters - Anonymous employee Kiwibot Employee Review

1.0
Sep 20, 2022
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Nothing, they sell you this idea to be part of a great start-up but it's just a big lie.

Cons

Everything here is a con, those robots are just a lie, they are operated via remote from an online platform, paying 0.50 dollars per hour to the drivers, they keep a record of everything, those robots have 4 cameras recording and tracking maps, selling all that data to big companies and they are behind the mask of being a "delivery service company". Kiwibot employs Colombians workers without permits to work in the United States for months, they pay them fifteen dollars per day, give them a car to drive without a valid license, exploit every single penny out of them, and make them live with co-workers even in the same room, living the worst days of their lives.

Explore other reviews about Kiwibot

5.0
Sep 29, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- very supportive team - can do with entry-level experience - on-field experience (1 month of preparation before this) - preventive and corrective maintenance - learn while doing - work in different areas - collaborate with your team and on-site staff

Cons

- work hours and schedules can vary depending on location

1.0
Apr 30, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

If you are part of the inner circle, the group of people who simply agree with everything management says and never raise concerns, you may receive occasional perks such as paid trips to international expos. For everyone else, there are essentially no benefits worth mentioning. Advancement and rewards here are based on loyalty to certain people, not on performance or merit.

Cons

— Sent to work in the U.S. without a work visa under the guise of "training" — Colombian minimum wage while living in California — Inadequate food allowance; employees spend a large share of their salary on food — Housing payments repeatedly missed by management — Unsafe vehicles with unresolved mechanical issues — Illegal trial periods exceeding 2 months (Colombian labor law violation) — No overtime, holiday, or night shift pay — 24/7 availability clause with no additional compensation — Employees must use their own personal computers — Only two weeks of training for a dual-role position; one role never trained — Culture that rewards compliance over competence — Multiple former employees report that their U.S. visa renewal was denied or complicated after this "training," with embassy officials asking specifically about activities performed during the stint

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