posting velocity //
Opens vs closes per day
Based on 53 events over 24 days. Green days had more opens than closes, red vice-versa. The dark line is the 7-day rolling average.
Kibbutz Yizre'el
Showing: Israel. Click another pill to switch.
Open now
41
Total active openings across all sites
Δ 28-day
+41
Opens minus closes in the last 28 days
Δ 90-day
+41
Opens minus closes in the last 90 days
posting velocity //
Based on 53 events over 24 days. Green days had more opens than closes, red vice-versa. The dark line is the 7-day rolling average.
role mix //
The green layer is the current share of active openings by role. The grey dashed layer is the 90-day baseline — gaps between them show where the company is shifting its hiring mix.
seniority pyramid //
Distribution of active openings by seniority. The 'unknown' row groups jobs from sources that don't expose seniority.
geography //
המקור לא חושף עיר לכל משרה — 41 משרות פתוחות ברחבי ישראל.
צפייה בכל המשרות →Active openings by region. Click a row to see jobs in that area.
time on market //
Median
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25th pct
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75th pct
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Based on 6 closed jobs and 41 still open (right-censored). Curve is Kaplan-Meier; band is the 95% CI.Low event count — the median will stabilise after ~44 more closures. Until then treat the values as indicative.
Window: 180 days back. Don't read the mean — the long tail biases it. Median and percentiles are the honest summary.
Republish rate
0.0%
0 / 12 of closed jobs reposted within 60 days
company intel · ai-generated
Updated 3d ago
Maytronics was founded in 1983 at Kibbutz Yizreel (Kibbutz Yizre'el), located in the Jezreel Valley in northern Israel. The company did not emerge from individual named co-founders in the startup sense — it was established as a collective industrial venture by Kibbutz Yizreel itself, which organized manufacturing operations as part of the kibbutz's economic diversification strategy during the early 1980s. Over its four-decade history, the company transitioned from a kibbutz industrial operation into a globally traded corporation while retaining Kibbutz Yizreel as a significant shareholder.
Maytronics' headquarters, primary R&D center, and main manufacturing facility are all located at Kibbutz Yizreel, near the city of Afula in northern Israel. This makes Maytronics unusual among Israeli tech and IoT companies, which predominantly cluster in the Tel Aviv metropolitan corridor, Herzliya, or Beer Sheva. The company has maintained this northern Israeli presence consistently, giving it a distinct geographic identity separate from the country's main high-tech hubs. Commercial offices and subsidiaries operate in the United States, Europe, and Australia.
Maytronics has been publicly traded on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange (TASE) under the ticker symbol MTRN since its IPO in 1996. The company is not listed on NASDAQ or any other exchange. As of mid-2024, Maytronics' market capitalization was approximately 1.8 billion Israeli shekels (roughly $490 million USD), having experienced some compression from a 2021-2022 peak due to cooling demand in the residential pool market. The company is consistently profitable on an operating basis and distributes dividends periodically to shareholders.
Maytronics employs approximately 1,200 people globally, of whom roughly 600 are based in Israel. The Israel-based workforce spans R&D, engineering, manufacturing, supply chain, finance, and corporate management. The remaining approximately 600 employees are distributed across subsidiaries and commercial offices in the United States, Europe (France, Germany, Italy), Australia, and Brazil — predominantly in sales, marketing, customer service, and local distribution operations.
The company's core product is an autonomous robotic pool cleaner — a connected IoT hardware device that navigates swimming pool floors, walls, and waterlines independently, filters debris and algae, and communicates operational data to a cloud platform accessible via smartphone app. The flagship brand is Dolphin, which has become the most recognized brand in its product category globally. The single most significant development in the past 12 months has been the company's navigation of a market downturn in residential pool construction in the United States, caused by elevated mortgage interest rates reducing new pool installations, alongside continued investment in IoT platform capabilities and AI-assisted scheduling features in the MyDolphin Plus application.
Maytronics is not a subsidiary. It is an independent publicly traded company. It has itself been an acquirer: most notably, it acquired the Aqua-Products robotic pool cleaner assets from Hayward Industries in 2017, expanding its commercial product lineup and distribution capacity in the North American market.
The primary product line of Maytronics is the Dolphin range of autonomous robotic pool cleaning devices. The Dolphin lineup covers residential pool cleaners (for private homeowners with pools of 6 to 15 meters in length) and commercial pool cleaners (for hotels, public facilities, university aquatic centers, and sports clubs). The Dolphin brand encompasses over 30 distinct models differentiated by pool size, cleaning coverage (floor-only versus floor-and-walls versus full coverage including waterline), and IoT connectivity level.
The problem Maytronics addresses is the labor- and chemical-intensity of swimming pool maintenance. Without robotic automation, pool cleaning requires either manual vacuuming by a pool technician — adding 1 to 3 hours of labor per cleaning cycle — or suction-side and pressure-side cleaners that depend on the pool's own pump system and are far less precise. Dolphin robots operate independently from the pool pump, run on low-voltage electricity (typically 24V DC), and can reduce required chlorination levels by improving water circulation and removing organic matter that drives chlorine demand.
Maytronics sells to two distinct buyer profiles. In the residential segment, the buyer is the individual homeowner with a private swimming pool, purchasing through a retail chain (Home Depot, Costco, Amazon) or a professional pool dealer. In the commercial segment, the buyer is a facility manager or procurement officer at a hotel, municipality, school, or fitness center, purchasing through a direct sales relationship or a specialist distributor. The residential market is B2C; the commercial market operates as B2B with longer sales cycles and service agreements.
The sales model relies heavily on channel distribution rather than direct-to-consumer or self-serve digital acquisition. Maytronics operates through a global network of authorized distributors and dealers, supplemented by e-commerce through Amazon (a significant channel in the United States) and the company's own websites. The commercial segment involves direct sales representatives who manage relationships with large accounts. There is no SaaS-style self-serve signup — the product is a physical hardware purchase.
Retail pricing for Dolphin residential robots ranges from approximately $299 for entry-level floor-only models (such as the Dolphin E10) to approximately $1,099 and above for premium full-coverage Wi-Fi models such as the Dolphin Nautilus CC Supreme. Commercial models range from approximately $1,500 to over $5,000 depending on pool size and feature set. The IoT connectivity and MyDolphin Plus app access are bundled into the hardware purchase price — there is no separately disclosed annual software subscription fee published by the company.
Maytronics' technical moat is built on four decades of accumulated intellectual property in underwater robotics: hydrodynamic motor design for pool environments, filtration cartridge engineering, gyroscopic and ultrasonic navigation algorithms for constrained underwater spaces, and Bluetooth/Wi-Fi connectivity optimized for RF transmission through water. The company holds dozens of patents across navigation systems, drive train designs, and filtration mechanisms. The IoT platform (MyDolphin Plus cloud backend) represents a more recent layer of competitive advantage, as it accumulates operational usage data that can be used to improve navigation algorithms and predictive maintenance features.
The engineering organization at Kibbutz Yizreel works across embedded firmware development (ARM-based microcontrollers), motor and mechanical engineering, mobile application development (iOS and Android), cloud backend development (hosted on AWS), and data analytics. The R&D teams also work on computer vision and sensor fusion for underwater environment mapping, which constitutes a domain-specific analog to the SLAM (Simultaneous Localization and Mapping) techniques used in terrestrial robotics.
The Dolphin Nautilus CC Plus is one of Maytronics' most commercially successful residential models, designed for pools up to 50 feet (approximately 15 meters) in length. It features full-coverage cleaning (floor, walls, and waterline), a CleverClean scanning system that maps the pool before each cleaning cycle, and Wi-Fi connectivity for scheduling and monitoring through the MyDolphin Plus app. It has been available in several updated revisions since approximately 2018 and remains a top seller on Amazon in the robotic pool cleaner category.
The Dolphin Active X4 is a premium residential model that adds a 4-wheel drive system for superior wall-climbing capability on pools with steep or curved walls. The Active series targets pool owners with more demanding geometries — curved pools, negative-edge designs, and pools with tile waterlines requiring more precise cleaning contact. The Active X4 was positioned as a flagship residential product in 2022-2023.
The Dolphin Commercial DX3 and DX5i are the flagship commercial products, designed for large public pools of up to 20 meters in length with heavy bather loads. These models feature oversized filtration baskets, reinforced drive systems for multi-hour daily operation, and smart navigation that adjusts cleaning patterns based on pool usage data. The DX5i was launched in 2023-2024 with updated navigation algorithms and enhanced MyDolphin Plus integration.
MyDolphin Plus is the IoT cloud platform and mobile application that connects all Wi-Fi-enabled Dolphin robots to the internet. It allows users to schedule cleaning cycles by day and time, select cleaning modes (floor only, floor and walls, full coverage), track the robot's real-time position within the pool via a graphical overlay, and receive service alerts. The app is available on iOS and Android, and connects to the robot via the home Wi-Fi network. In 2024, Maytronics rolled out AI-assisted scheduling features that analyze historical cleaning patterns and pool usage to suggest optimal cleaning frequency.
Maytronics has not publicly announced the sunset of any major product line in recent years, though older Triton and Liberty model series have been replaced by DX-series commercial robots. The company does not participate in AWS Marketplace or Salesforce AppExchange as a software vendor. Products sold on Amazon carry standard CE (European conformity) marking and UL (Underwriters Laboratories) listing in the United States. SOC 2 and FedRAMP certifications are not relevant to or reported by Maytronics, given the consumer and facility hardware nature of the product.
Maytronics' most direct competitor is Fluidra (BME: FLUI), the Spanish-headquartered pool equipment conglomerate that acquired Zodiac Pool Systems in 2018 and then merged with Jandy in the United States to become the largest global pool equipment manufacturer by revenue. Under Zodiac and Polaris branding, Fluidra sells robotic pool cleaners that compete directly with Dolphin across residential and commercial segments. Fluidra's primary advantage is its comprehensive distribution network across pool dealers, plumbing distributors, and retail chains in North America and Europe, as well as cross-selling leverage from pump, heater, and chemical businesses that Maytronics does not possess.
Hayward Industries (NYSE: HAYW), which IPO'd on the New York Stock Exchange in January 2021, is a second direct competitor. Hayward manufactures the SharkVac and TigerShark lines of robotic pool cleaners at multiple price points. Hayward's brand recognition among professional pool installers in the United States is a competitive advantage — installers who specify Hayward pumps and automation systems often recommend Hayward cleaning robots to customers. Maytronics sold the Aqua-Products manufacturing assets to expand its own North American commercial presence but still competes with Hayward-branded robots in that market.
Pentair (NASDAQ: PNR) represents a third competitive axis, particularly in the premium commercial and smart-home-integrated segments. Pentair's IntelliBot robotic cleaner is positioned at the high end of the residential market and integrates with Pentair's broader IntelliConnect pool automation ecosystem. Pentair's advantage lies in its established smart home connectivity architecture, though robotic cleaning is a smaller portion of Pentair's overall business — giving Maytronics a focus advantage in that specific category.
Maytronics does not appear in Gartner Magic Quadrant reports, which are not relevant to the consumer hardware and industrial IoT sector it occupies. The company's pricing is positioned in the mid-to-premium range for residential products and competitively in the commercial segment. There are no free-tier or freemium offerings — every product requires a hardware purchase.
In 2022, Maytronics reported continued adoption of Dolphin Commercial robots by hospitality chains including properties in the Marriott network, cited in company marketing materials. The 2023-2024 period saw revenue headwinds from the U.S. residential pool market slowdown — the National Spa and Pool Institute reported a decline in new pool permits in the United States beginning in 2022 as mortgage rates rose from under 3% to above 7%, compressing discretionary spending on pool equipment. Maytronics' trajectory is one of defending a strong niche position while investing in IoT platform differentiation to justify premium pricing against lower-cost Asian alternatives entering the market.
Key sector tailwinds for Maytronics include growing global awareness of water conservation (robotic cleaners reduce backwashing and chemical consumption), the broader smart home and IoT adoption trend, and a large installed base of aging pools in the United States (estimated at over 5.5 million residential pools) requiring maintenance equipment replacements. Headwinds include input cost inflation for motors and electronics, competition from lower-cost Chinese-manufactured robotic cleaners, and the post-pandemic normalization of pool investment after a surge in 2020-2021.
All of Maytronics' primary operations — manufacturing, R&D, engineering, and corporate headquarters — are located at Kibbutz Yizreel in the Jezreel Valley, approximately 15 kilometers south of Nazareth and 30 kilometers southeast of Haifa. The kibbutz setting differentiates Maytronics from virtually every other Israeli IoT or hardware company, which are based in Tel Aviv, Herzliya, Haifa's Matam tech park, or Beer Sheva's technology park near Ben-Gurion University. Maytronics has no significant office in Tel Aviv or Herzliya as of the most recent public information.
The Israel-based workforce of approximately 600 people encompasses essentially all of the company's engineering and R&D capacity, its manufacturing operation, supply chain management, corporate finance, human resources, and executive leadership. Customer-facing functions for international markets are handled partly from Israel and partly from the local subsidiaries. The concentration of technical talent in a single northern Israel location is a deliberate organizational choice rooted in the company's kibbutz origins and the community employment commitments that come with the kibbutz ownership structure.
Maytronics did not announce a formal office expansion or relocation in Israel in 2023 or 2024. The company has not publicly disclosed layoffs in Israel during 2023-2024, though like many Israeli companies, it absorbed disruptions from the wave of reserve military duty (miluim) call-ups following the October 7, 2023 Hamas attack, which affected the availability of employees across its Israeli workforce. The company has not publicly quantified the operational impact of these mobilizations.
The founders of Maytronics are Israeli — specifically, the founding entity is Kibbutz Yizreel, an Israeli agricultural-industrial cooperative founded decades before Maytronics itself. Key technical leaders and executives are Israeli nationals. Eyal Khayat has served as CEO of Maytronics, leading the company through its IoT transformation period and international expansion. The R&D leadership team is composed of Israeli engineers with backgrounds in electrical engineering, mechanical engineering, embedded systems, and software development.
In Israel, Maytronics typically hires for: embedded firmware engineers (C/C++ on ARM microcontrollers), mechanical and electromechanical engineers, PCB and electronics design engineers, mobile software developers (iOS Swift, Android Kotlin), cloud and backend developers (AWS, Python, Node.js), data scientists for pool usage analytics, product managers for connected hardware products, and automation and quality engineers for the manufacturing line. The company's geographic location near Haifa makes it a natural destination for graduates of the Technion — Israel Institute of Technology, which is approximately 35 kilometers away and is Israel's premier engineering university.
Kibbutz Yizreel itself remains a meaningful shareholder in Maytronics, holding shares through its industrial holding company — an ownership structure uncommon in Israeli publicly traded companies outside the kibbutz-industrial sector. The stock is held by Israeli institutional investors including local pension funds and mutual funds. There are no prominent Israeli venture capital names (such as Sequoia Israel, Viola, or Pitango) among the investor base — Maytronics grew organically from its kibbutz industrial origins without venture backing.
The company's culture reflects its kibbutz heritage in meaningful ways: lower employee turnover than typical Tel Aviv tech companies, a greater emphasis on seniority and long-term employment, and community ties that make the Kibbutz Yizreel campus both a workplace and a living environment for some employees. There is no documented pipeline from IDF intelligence units such as Unit 8200 or Mamram — the hiring profile is engineering-academic rather than intelligence-community. The Technion pipeline and the proximity to northern Israel's engineering workforce are the primary talent sources.
Sources
Company website
news feed
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key people & leadership
3 key people, sourced from public records — with a per-row confidence score.
Eyal Khayat
CEO
Eyal Tryber
Chief Executive Officer
Yair Ben-Haim
Former CEO