I’d like to first address a few negative reviews I’ve read on glassdoor which, in my opinion, are NOT cons. These are related to comments made about the company having a "toxic work environment”, "heavy micromanaging", "limited career development", and “poor work/life balance”. I suppose there have been teams or managers over the course of the company’s relatively short history when these things have existed. However I have to say that in my time here, and I work with several departments across the organization, these issues cannot be further from reality based on what I’ve seen. On the contrary, I’ve never worked at a company where the voices of non-management employees are more openly or freely expressed and taken into consideration by leadership. Never have I seen backstabbing or manipulation tactics as mentioned by one or two reviewers. As far as micromanaging, this is another complaint that I haven’t really seen much here. I’m sure it happens occasionally, but most of the leaders I interact with give a great deal of autonomy to their team members and encourage open ‘white space’ thinking to bring their own ideas to the table and actually implement them as the organization scales. Career growth - I am constantly seeing individuals get promoted for work well-done as they move into that next level of their careers. In fact, Freenome has two performance review/promotion cycles a year (every 6 months) whereas most companies have only one. Work/life balance, as mentioned above, is highly encouraged.
All that said, the company is not perfect. There is room for improvement as with any organization. It’s expanding quickly and yes there are some managers in stretch roles that may not be seasoned leaders and can use more coaching. This is all part of being in an early stage, fast-paced company where growing pains are inevitable.
There is a certain degree of woke-ness and political/social virtue-signaling that is unfortunately becoming more and more common in the SF tech world. I believe a company and its employees can, and should, embrace diversity and inclusion, but not to the point where it becomes its own narrative that distracts from the core mission and can also alienate other employees. There seems to be less of it than this time a year ago. At the end of the day, diversity is part of Freenome’s fabric, going above and beyond to ensure diverse clinical trials which is a huge leap forward from the way big pharma/biotech have done things for decades.