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Amida Technology Solutions

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Amida Technology Solutions reviews

2.5

26% would recommend to a friend

(70 total reviews)

Peter Levin

38% approve of CEO

21% positive business outlook

Amida Technology Solutions has an employee rating of 2.5 out of 5 stars, based on 70 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Amida Technology Solutions employee rating is 35% below average for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

70 reviews
1.0
Jan 16, 2020

Amida is Broken

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Free food, most of the rank an file were pretty nice and helpful. Good location

Cons

I wasn't going to write a Glassdoor review after I left Amida because it was just something I wanted to put behind me. Working there was a rotten experience and I've moved on, and I didn't see too much value in piling on. The other reviews on here capture the experience of working their quite effectively. Then I saw the article written by the CEO about Glassdoor on Quillette (yes, that Quillette, the same beacon of intellectual truth that brought you "Why Women Don't Code" and unwittingly published a hoax article about the Democratic Socialists of America because it aligned with their politics), and decided that a response was in order. If you can get through this tarpit of tortured metaphors and ten cent words, you'll find that it amounts to nothing more than the author's very verbose complaint that people have been mean to him on the Internet, and that he can't do anything about it. He claims that the negative reviews he's received on Glassdoor are damaging, going as far as to claim that anonymous complaints published online "can be as devastating (and career-threatening) as any other kind of exploitative or maliciously opportunistic behavior, including those of unsavory leaders who deserve exposure." He offers no evidence to back up this claim -- no examples of businesses torpedoed by a negative Glassdoor review or careers ruined because someone falsely accused an executive of uncouth behavior. Instead, he boasts about how well his company is doing in the second paragraph, and proceeds to prattle on about cancel culture and its deleterious effects on the world at large, blaming social media (it's worth noting that Glassdoor is not a social media site) for virtually all of society's ills, from corrupt elections to character defamation to, most confusingly, global warming. Does he have a bit of a point regarding the corrosive nature of Internet aided outrage? Sure. Does he back up his point with any referable evidence or relevant examples? Not really. He brings up the case of Erika and Nicholas Christakis, two Yale professors who were more or less pushed out of their jobs when the latter sent out an email to students questioning a university notice about culturally offensive Halloween costumes. Did the students overact in this situation? Maybe. But what the CEO fails to consider by citing this incident is that it wasn't an example of the anonymous aggrieved hiding behind a screen and a keyboard -- students literally walked up to the professors in question and told them to resign. Instead of discontented employees posting to Glassdoor, would the CEO rather they march to his office and tell him he's a terrible boss with an inflated sense of self? Based on the things i saw at Amida, I'm sure they would be happy to oblige. Likewise, the situation at Yale wasn't just an example of a difference of opinion. It was a reaction by students to a chiding, paternalistic email that may not have even been appropriate to send in the first place. Of course, "paternalistic chiding" was the CEO's chosen tone of voice in nearly every conversation I had with him, so perhaps the kinship he feels with these people is clouding critical faculties. This article also spends a lot of time insisting that people should put aside their feelings to have rational, fact based discussions about their work. Let me tell you something: the conference room at Amida has no doors or walls, so everyone in the office gets a front row seat to nearly every meeting that goes on. I don't know that I've ever seen someone contradict more experts and trained professionals based on their "feelings" than Amida's CEO. I've literally seen him dismiss statistics because they don't "feel" right to him. His management approach is built on the assumption that every conclusion he reaches is fact-based and impartial, and that anyone who disagrees with him is being dramatic or overly emotional. (I've went through all of the Glassdoor reviews, by the way, to try and find the one that accuses him of voting for Trump. Best as I can tell, it doesn't exist. There's one that compares him to Donald Trump, but it never claims he voted for Donald Trump, and you'd think that a self-professed intellectual such as the CEO would be able to understand the difference. He also claims that this review was written by the same person who told him that they found their truth in the Bible. How can he claim to know this when all Glassdoor reviews are submitted anonymously? Cite your sources, professor!). I could go on for pages about all of the other flimsy arguments and gnarled prose found within this piece, but all I'll say for now is if you're thinking about working at Amida, read this article first. Note how it offers up no actual solution to fixing the very thing it claims is broken. Note the cumbersome, faux-erudite way its written. You've just been transported into the mind of the CEO of Amida. Does he seem like someone you'd like to work for? It sure would've made me reconsider my decision...

2.0
Jan 16, 2020

Believe the reviews.

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The allure of the snacks is the great, as I think you'll find in all of these reviews. The snacks are next level. Also great coworkers, LOTS of free time (which you definitely could use to advance your career if you're motivated!), decent pay. But let's be real we all stayed for the snacks.

Cons

Most of what you need to know the CEO wrote himself in an article published on Quillette entitled “Glassdoor is Broken” (google it). It’s a long read but if you work at Amida you will receive similar manifestos privately via email on a regular, probably monthly basis, so if you want to work there I hope you enjoyed it. A word to the wise though, the private ones may be even less coherent than that one (if that’s even possible). They usually center around the common idea that millennials are incompetent and whiny smartphone addicts who just want attention through claiming victimhood (although Glassdoor is anonymous so I don’t know what we youngsters are going after here). Sometimes they’re about how *women* are whiny smartphone addicts who don’t understand the struggle of being the CEO (how could they ever get it?) and a man in today’s world. See, an exciting workplace! What variety! Best job ever! The so-called motto of the company – “do work that matters with people you care about” is in fundamental contradiction with Mr. Levin’s statement in the above-mentioned article. See the salient part quoted below. “The core principle and foundational purpose of the company is to provide employment and growth opportunities for those—especially in Washington DC, and especially for women (notoriously under-represented in tech)—who may not have otherwise considered or chosen a career path with a venture-backed high-tech company.” Yes, you read that correctly. The purpose of this company is not bound to any idea of making the world a better place through technology, of supporting today’s leaders in making wise choices, nothing like this. No, the purpose of this company is to give YOU a job. Especially if you’re a high potential woman, god knows you’re not talented or smart enough to find a job where you have tasks outside of writing proposals and adjusting slides to fit the CEO’s liking. If that’s your idea of doing work that matters then jump right in! But be prepared to be aggressively talked down to, degraded, and contacted at all hours of the day. Such behavior, to the CEO’s credit, is typically gender agnostic but skews towards women who don’t yet know how to stand up for themselves. I think the CEO really does think he is *saving* all those poor high-potential minorities. Unfortunately good intentions are not enough. There needs to be at least some attempt at genuine empathy and tangible changes that show the employees that they have the power to help shape the culture they work in. People have voiced their concerns. They are appeased with methods designed to make them feel like they can have an impact while everything remains the same. That is because there is no recognition from the CEO that anything is wrong, no recognition that he might need to change his mindset and his behavior. But instead, he puts his insecurities back on his employees, asks for reassurance, then continues to think (and publicly write) about how his employees are just naive social justice warriors trying to get recognition from their woke friends. If the work were meaningful, maybe you could even put up with this toxic and far too emotional environment. Unfortunately, the work is menial at all levels of the organization and even in technical roles, your primary activity will be trying to stay sane as everyone around you (usually quite wonderful people) are harassed and broken down.

5.0
Nov 27, 2019

Great company to grown

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Great staff - A small company so space to grow and develop new skill sets

Cons

-No cons at the moment

Viewing 46 - 48 of 70 Reviews

Glassdoor has 76 Amida Technology Solutions reviews submitted anonymously by Amida Technology Solutions employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Amida Technology Solutions is right for you.