Flexport reviews

3.5

65% would recommend to a friend

(1,184 total reviews)
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Ryan Petersen

80% approve of CEO

54% positive business outlook

Flexport has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 1,184 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Flexport employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Transportation & Logistics industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

1K reviews
5.0
Mar 18, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Ideas for change and improvement often come from individual contributors as opposed to management - Switching teams is relatively easy - C levels are very approachable - Hiring bar is really high and other engineers come from successful backgrounds - Just hired a VP of Engineering that's going to change/fix a lot of the organizational issues and restructure the org

Cons

- Career advancement and review cycles are still being fully ironed out - The product has a ton of area as it's really wide and it gets progressively harder to understand everything

1.0
Mar 2, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Quite average tech company perks

Cons

Flexport don't care about their employees.... monkey work, bad culture, no transparency

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Flexport Response
8y
Ryan Petersen here, CEO and founder of Flexport. Thank you for taking the time to provide feedback. While I appreciate your perspective, I find your claims unfair to the Flexporters who work so hard and create so much value for our customers and for each other everyday. Our engineering teams are making incredible progress toward automating the process of capturing all the data required in global trade, as well all the routine tasks that have to happen to ship goods across the planet. Until we've fully standardized, digitized, and automated all the processes involved in global trade we will have many roles that involve data entry and other types of repetitive work. However, we are always clear with candidates about the nature of the work they'll be doing, and we score highly on culture surveys when we ask our team if the job meets their expectations set during the recruiting process. I’m sorry you feel we don’t care about our employees. I can assure you that’s not true. Indeed, it's because we care so much about our people that we hire entry level people into roles that are closer to customers and where decisions are being made, rather than in offshore business process outsourcing operations. While many people's first job at Flexport will involve data entry and other repetitive tasks, we hire them onto cross-functional squads so they get exposure to other roles including operations, customer service, sales, customs compliance, and all the various modes of transportation we support. We create many career advancement opportunities for employees through a variety of programs, and people who have started in entry level jobs have moved across the world to build teams and open offices for us. Our most notable program, the Global Rotational Program, encourages high performers at every level of the company to move to a new geography or function. Because our culture relies so heavily on cross-functional teams, and because our mission is so global, we value well-rounded generalists who can move seamlessly across disciplines and geographies. That requires major investments in training and mobility infrastructure, which we continue to make. These programs and investments create tremendous career development for our people at every level of the organization. Beyond the official programs of our people operations group, if you spend a little time with us you'll see that team members at Flexport really do care about each other, from me as CEO all the way through our 11 offices around the world. Most of us who've been here more than a year or two feel like Flexport is our second family, full of people we love and trust. At Flexport one of our core values is "fill the gap" because we believe in growth mindsets, experimental discovery, and assisting others when they try things outside their comfort zones in pursuit of growth. You see that everyday, as Flexporters work hard to help each other get better, learn faster, and do more to create value for our clients. And on the subject of transparency, it's worth noting that I wrote my thesis in graduate school about radical transparency in the workplace. You can read it here, and I'm proud to say that ten years on, you can see almost every element of that philosophy thriving in Flexport's culture: https://medium.com/@typesfast/out-of-control-by-design-6f7934498c54
5.0
Mar 1, 2018

totally convinced that world domination is possible

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

International trade - inside and outside of Flexport - is a sincerely interesting space for anyone who likes geography or political factoids or the crazy mash-up of cross-cultural collaboration and deal making. Flexport just makes it more interesting because it's a stellar team of hard working, smart people who see obstacles and complexity and just another thing that makes their jobs interesting. The team is empowered to be great and find great solutions to our clients' problems and people take that power seriously. Diverse, international use of our product challenges design, implementation. The company is growing and changing really fast, which is constantly creating opportunities for growth (and a few moments of holy-cow-how-will-we-pull-this-off anxiety). Plus perks, by that I mean snacks. The office isn't at the airport in any city and the public transit / bike access makes commutes easy (studies show, one of the biggest influencers on overall life happiness!). The health benefits are amazing. Our slack custom emojis are second-to-none.

Cons

Our offices go through cycles of being totally baller, how-did-we-deserve-this-space, to ordinary offices, to nasty, excessively crowded spaces with bathroom lines and conference room-related micro-aggressions. The workspace team does their best, but having a great office location means they don't have tons to work with. Noise cancelling headphones are a must and should be included as new-hire on-boarding bonus. Still lacking women in (visible) leadership. Combine logistics + tech and you have a very male cohort up and down the org. Work-life balance, although not as bad as it was in the early days, is still a struggle in many roles.

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Flexport Response
8y
"Love the empowerment but would like more focus and fewer distractions. Not every market can or should be attacked at the same time." I agree - Ryan Petersen, CEO
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Glassdoor has 1,294 Flexport reviews submitted anonymously by Flexport employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Flexport is right for you.