StrongMind reviews

3.6

70% would recommend to a friend

(120 total reviews)

Damian Creamer

61% approve of CEO

56% positive business outlook

StrongMind has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 120 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The StrongMind employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Education industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

120 reviews
2.0
Oct 12, 2018

Absolutely Horrible Leadership - Great Pay

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Pretty cool office space and gym, great pay for higher positions. Good curriculum department.

Cons

A perfect case study of a poorly managed company. $54M annual revenue from Primavera Online High School, Strongmind is just the technology arm and barely clears a few million in sales after YEARS of trying to make something happen. Huge staff that doesnt' get much done and they don't support the only team that really makes them any money. Management hasn't changed since they changed their name from FlipSwitch (go read the reviews), I should have taken warning from those wise words. The CEO still functions like a startup CEO by telling teams what to do and what to build on a whim, bypassing all normal strategy and planning. He even built a 1970s style office that overlooks everyone on the "floor" with big glass walls, pretty incredible. Sales has no idea what they are doing and there is no real product. The main product was created for Primavera and was trying to be sold to other companies but requires a ton of custom code which is NOT scalable. The leadership has no idea how to build good products with any type of methodology and it takes its toll on the staff. Basically, it's "do what the CEO thinks" without data or research or anything to back it up and spend way to much time and money on things that will never see the light of day. People say they want change, but they don't really and people are scared to speak up. Must be why good people are leaving left and right. You have been warned.

2.0
May 20, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Benefits, holidays, gym. Extrinsic rewards, nice Co-workers, stepping stone for quick experience, but nothing beyond . Run away now from the bipolar circus now!

Cons

Bipolar environment and leadership! They think they are a start up and they just use true startup tactics to make employees believe they are part of a startup culture, they need to spend time with true startups. They are an old company (Primavera Learning), that has expanded No room for advancement, but they mislead you and tell you there is that available. It is the owner/CEO and VPs of each department, the rest are all on the same level and nowhere to go. No Board of Directors, only the owner/ceo. Favoritism for many, they come and go as they please, do not add to their team, do not complete their work on time or correctly, and some individuals in different departments spend most of their days playing, socializing and letting the rest of the team carry the load! If you know the CEO or are in with your Vp, then you can do no wrong and are held to a much lower set of expectations and will not lose your job! It’s like high school with absentee teachers and many dress like that! That seems to be all they can afford to hire. There is little, if any, communication of objectives and expectations. No form of evaluation or feedback! Little and no raises! No one speaks up, as everyone is afraid of crossing the CEO and losing your job’ Yes, turnover is high on all levels, people disappear regularly. If you are thinking about applying, turn around and run as fast as you can to a real company. You will have a better chance at success and respect elsewhere! They do not care about your talent and knowledge, just your ability to settle for less and keep quiet.

avatar
StrongMind Response
8y
Thank you for taking the time to provide feedback. StrongMind is at an interesting point in its development – we did originate as the technical arm of Primavera Online and continue to support their efforts. In that sense, we are an enterprise software company with a large and established customer. However, several years ago we pivoted the organization and began generalizing our software into a platform capable of supporting outside schools and learning organizations. We face many of the same challenges as every other EdTech Startup – finding market fit, driving growth, keeping up with emergent trends, etc. It’s a challenging dichotomy and we are working to find the balance between the two worlds with varying degrees of success. We are proudly a flat organization, with everyone only a few “jumps” from the CEO on the org chart. This is by design – multiple layers of management slow decision making and take away autonomy and agency from the product teams. We want the people who do things to be empowered to make decisions about how we achieve our objectives. This does reduce the amount of traditional upward mobility as there simply aren’t many steps in our corporate ladder. Instead we advocate for more in place growth, where team members take on increasing responsibility within the context of their current domains. The benefit of this is twofold – first, it enables team membership to stay consistent and allows teams to gel with one another. Highly performant teams make a company go and we work to give teams the runway they need to find and optimize their performance as a unit. Second, it allows individuals to become experts in their product and form a deeper understanding of the users they serve. The risk of this approach is teams become insular. We combat this in a number of ways, such as: encouraging safaris (one employee working for several sprints on another team), supporting horizontal mobility across teams, and encouraging company-wide attendance at demos. We are not the right fit for individuals seeking to climb a traditional corporate ladder and we probably never will be. Our environment is casual, but results based. We support a flexible schedule, allowing employees to shift their schedule provided they deliver on expectations. For some, this looks like a traditional 8-5 schedule. For others, its more hours with breaks interspersed. Many employees choose to use the on-site gym during the day and stay later into the evening. Others schedule remote work days. Still more choose to work extended hours 4 days a week so they can leave early on Fridays. In terms of success, we are on-track to meet our growth and expansion goals for the year. If you did not attend the Q1 All Hands, I encourage you to watch the video for a summary of current progress towards our 2018 targets. We’re asking a lot from our teams – both in terms of delivery and flexibility – and we are investing to support them. Among other things, we grew staff by 40% last year, upped our resource spend, and support continued learning through resources like Pluralsight. Thank you again for taking the time to provide feedback. If you haven’t already, I also encourage you to submit specific concerns internally or to schedule a 1:1 with your VP to voice them in person or reach out to another member of leadership or our Human Resources staff.
1.0
Apr 1, 2016

Lack of Transparency, Ethics, Professionalism

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-You will not be micromanaged: there is virtually zero oversight on how employees produce a return on investment. -There are some very kind, intelligent, and conscientious employees on the Curriculum side. -HR does a good job of integrating team-building exercises, etc. to try to establish a positive rapport in the office. These can feel a little obnoxious and overbearing, at times, but I believe the intent behind them is positive.

Cons

-The company lacks a clear vision and purpose. Really, aside from writing curriculum for Primavera, they have never been able to find a stable market for their product. The "future strategy" is constantly shifting, as there is no research and development department to suss out opportunities and act upon them. What’s more, it seems that the owner/CEO is unwilling to commit to any clear, singular strategy. FlipSwitch instead has a tendency to spend massive amounts of time and money trying to please individual clients, who often want something radically different from the product as it was envisioned (ie: printable products rather than online curriculum). Thus, a lot of time and money goes into producing one-offs that do nothing to help drive a focused vision for the company. -There is virtually zero oversight of individual employees' productivity. On the plus side, this means you will never be micromanaged. On the negative side, it means that some employees get away with doing absolutely NOTHING (dozing off at their desk on the clock, watching NetFlix all day, telling loud and inappropriate jokes) while others who work earnestly and contribute can't even count on the power of yearly or twice-yearly evaluations to help them progress professionally and rise above the fray. Basically, there is no incentive for doing passable work, let alone striving to do great and innovative work. -Ethics. Primavera makes its money as follows. A public school student opts out of their public school and into Primavera, and the $ that would have been allocated by the state for that student's public education instead goes to Primavera. FlipSwitch writes the curriculum that those students learn from, and Primavera pays FlipSwitch for that curriculum. Given this arrangement, you would think that FlipSwitch would have the discretion to hire curriculum developers (the people who write the curriculum) who have subject matter knowledge equivalent to that of a classroom teacher, right? Not the case. Classroom teachers must be licensed (a process that ensures their credentials match the position they are applying for). However, no such regulation exists for curriculum developers. As such, the person who is writing your child's curriculum for English may, in fact, have a Physical Education degree. Most Ed-Techs are responsible and ethical and hire qualified subject matter experts to guide the creation of curriculum. Not the case here. Why FlipSwitch would deem it acceptable for a professional who wouldn't be qualified to teach in the classroom to write the curriculum that all of Primavera's teachers will use in their classrooms, is beyond me. In fact, it's completely unethical. -Management does not treat staff professionally, and avoids dealing with tough, but relevant problems. When I worked here, we had hour-long meetings about selecting chairs with the proper ergonomic support. However, when it came to making important decisions about products, management either brushed the questions aside, or made spur of the moment decisions without considering the depth and breadth of the issues at hand. When these concerns were raised by departments or individual employees, they were often regarded as trifling matters, and the employees treated as overreaching naysayers for bringing them up. My sense is that the upper management lacked the know-how as well as the confidence to troubleshoot these issues, and was even, at times, intimidated by the professional expertise and knowledge of the employees who would raise them. What a shame that, instead of drawing on the wealth of knowledge those employees had to offer, the approach was to attempt to stifle them, and then act as though their ideas were somehow illegitimate and irrelevant.

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Glassdoor has 123 StrongMind reviews submitted anonymously by StrongMind employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if StrongMind is right for you.