Great company & product, but poor and inexperienced U.S. leadership - Sales Xtool US Employee Review

2.0
Jan 2, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Working at xTool gives you extremely rare exposure to a fast-growing global consumer electronics brand during its expansion into the U.S. market. It’s one of the most well-known and widely adopted laser brands worldwide, so the experience you gain in hardware, software, and community-driven product ecosystems is genuinely valuable for your career. You also get meaningful experience working with distributors, retailers, influencers, and community groups. These relationships teach you how consumer hardware moves through the U.S. market and what it takes to build a brand that resonates with creators and professionals. Coworkers across the U.S. team are genuinely talented, kind, supportive, and mission-driven. Despite the challenges, the team culture at the individual level is hardworking and collaborative — people care deeply about the brand and the community that uses the products. The products themselves are truly industry-leading. Working with cutting-edge lasers, fabrication tools, and new technologies every day is exciting, creatively rewarding, and often the best part of the job.

Cons

The U.S. General Manager is the core issue, inexperienced, disconnected from the realities of the U.S. market, and routinely makes poorly thought-out decisions that create chaos across teams. -Leadership style is reactive instead of strategic; priorities flip weekly with no clear direction. -Constant restructuring of goals, OKRs, and responsibilities without explanation, sometimes changing each quarter. -Below-market pay for California and Mountain View, with average benefits and no meaningful perks. -U.S. team is treated as an afterthought compared to the China team, leading to communication breakdowns and unrealistic expectations. -Workload is heavy, boundaries blur, and you’re routinely pushed outside your role because of leadership instability and incompetence. -High-potential product completely overshadowed by mismanagement and lack of operational maturity.

Explore other reviews about Xtool US

2.0
May 28, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The role can strengthen your ability to stay agile, problem-solve quickly, and operate in a fast-moving environment with limited structure. It also provides experience navigating difficult leadership dynamics, managing ambiguity, and finding solutions on the fly.

Cons

Management communication can feel inconsistent and, at times, dismissive or unprofessional. Communication often feels reactive rather than strategic, with limited mentorship, support, or long-term investment in employees. Compensation is significantly below Bay Area market rate compared to the workload and level of responsibility expected. Responsibilities often increase without matching compensation, clear title progression, or the infrastructure needed to support the added workload. Over time, the role can feel like doing the work of multiple people without fair pay, proper resources, or a realistic support system. Burnout feels common across teams, and employees often seem to operate in survival mode rather than from a place of strategy, stability, or healthy growth. Turnover also creates instability and makes it difficult to build momentum. The in-office experience does not offer much added value. There is limited company culture, few meaningful perks, limited benefits, and not much that makes coming into the office feel worthwhile. Overall, this is not a progressive or forward-thinking work environment. For anyone trying to grow their earning potential, build a strong career path, or be fairly compensated as responsibilities increase, this environment may be limiting.

2.0
Jun 15, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The strongest aspect of the company is the people. The U.S. team is filled with talented, hardworking, supportive individuals who care deeply about customers, the brand, and each other. Many employees consistently go above and beyond despite challenging circumstances. Employees also gain exposure to trade shows, creator partnerships, distributors, retailers, and customer communities, providing a broad understanding of how consumer technology products are marketed and supported in the U.S. xTool has some of the most innovative and well-respected products in the laser and maker space. Working with industry-leading technology and a globally recognized brand is genuinely exciting and provides valuable experience in consumer hardware, software, e-commerce, retail partnerships, and community engagement.

Cons

Unfortunately, the biggest challenge facing the U.S. organization is leadership and operational management. The U.S. office suffers from frequent shifts in priorities, changing goals, repeated restructures, and a lack of consistent strategic direction. Teams often find themselves adapting to new initiatives before previous initiatives have had an opportunity to succeed. Employee morale is extremely low and turnover has become a significant concern. During my time with the company, multiple employees departed while staffing levels remained relatively stagnant despite ambitious growth goals. Existing employees are routinely expected to absorb additional responsibilities in an already understaffed environment. Communication between headquarters and the U.S. office is often ineffective, creating confusion, duplicated work, and unrealistic expectations. Employees with Chinese fluency frequently become unofficial intermediaries between teams because communication structures are insufficient. Compensation appears below market for Mountain View and the broader Silicon Valley region, especially considering the complexity of many roles. Employees are frequently expected to perform responsibilities beyond their job descriptions without corresponding compensation adjustments. This is particularly true for specialized customer escalation roles, operational support functions, and employees serving as communication bridges between headquarters and U.S. operations. The company also lacks a strong local HR presence familiar with California employment practices. This creates uncertainty around policies, onboarding, employee support, and employment-related decisions. There have also been instances where significant employment-related changes were implemented with little notice, creating additional uncertainty and stress for employees. The products and employees deserve better organizational support than they currently receive.

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