Frontiers reviews

2.7

34% would recommend to a friend

(564 total reviews)
avatar

Kamila Markram

31% approve of CEO

32% positive business outlook

Frontiers has an employee rating of 2.7 out of 5 stars, based on 564 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Frontiers employee rating is 27% below average for employers within the Audiovisual y medios de comunicación industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

564 reviews
1.0
Jul 24, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Remote Flexibility: Excellent work-from-home structure supports a healthy work-life balance. - Engagement with Science: The role offers exposure to leading researchers in science fields, making it intellectually engaging. - Structured Training: Initial onboarding was comprehensive, with strong editorial SOPs and research ethics at its core. - Job Stability: Very low risk of termination, which provides financial stability even in turbulent periods. - Early Team Environment: A youthful and energetic team culture initially fostered collaboration and enthusiasm. - Manager-Dependent Development: Some excellent managers encouraged autonomy and professional growth through mentoring and development opportunities. - Opportunities to build subject-matter knowledge.

Cons

- Toxic Metrics Culture: Promotions and recognition are based almost entirely on arbitrary performance targets (e.g., special issues launched), not meaningful outcomes or quality. - Encouraged Corner-Cutting: To meet quotas, employees must bypass best practices; those who work ethically and offer equal, fair customer support and follow best practices across teams fall behind. Those who fall behind face stagnation in their role and pay. - Micromanagement & Volatility: Constant top-down changes, inconsistent priorities, and shifting KPIs make strategic planning nearly impossible. -Surface-Level Policy Shifts: Short-term changes in quality metrics were finally made to address external complaints but quickly reverted, often with new burdens added. - Feedback Is Unwelcome: Constructive criticism, even when backed by data, is actively discouraged or ignored. Challenging the system often leads to being sidelined. - Disconnect Between Training and Practice: SOPs from onboarding are impossible to follow while meeting the day-to-day workload. Quality-focused goals are incompatible with quantity performance demands. - Overburdened Staff: Properly doing the job "by the book" to upper management standard requires unsustainable hours; shortcuts become normalized. Nobody checks routinely beyond the numbers. Proper external data-driven investigations into the quality of work have been rare and often done long after the responsible employees switched teams or left altogether. No real improvements are made. Consistently, new starters are faced with dealing with the shortcomings and mistakes of other people, without any recognition. Toxic Management & Leadership Culture: High Turnover, Management included: Had 5–6 managers over 5 years, many lasting only a year or less. This instability undermines continuity and trust. Two Types of Managers: A) Performative Leaders: Charismatic, articulate, highly ambitious, target-driven managers who thrive in public-facing roles. While good presenters, they often lack empathy, people skills, and follow-through. Struggled with supporting team members through personal or mental health challenges. Promotions come quickly for this group, at the expense of other people's struggles. B) Supportive Mentors: Genuine people managers who offer mentorship, autonomy, and space for growth. Actively listened and allowed me to take initiative. These individuals are often reassigned to low-performing journals or leave the department entirely, suggesting that their leadership style is undervalued compared to the KPI-chasing one. Lack of Recognition, Innovation & Visibility Innovation is Performative: Those who speak up in meetings and lead initiatives are often newer employees seeking visibility and promotion. Many are rewarded despite lacking experience or substance behind their suggestions. Managers and staff are expected to "say yes" to everything, regardless of logic or value. Critical thinking is undervalued. Attention Craves Reward: Upper management disproportionately rewards individuals who self-promote and project enthusiasm, regardless of whether their ideas are meaningful or sustainable. Promotions Based on Compliance, Not Competence: Saying "yes" to every demand and inflating numbers is the fast-track to promotion, not integrity, quality, or strategic insight. Experienced Voices Are Often Ignored: Long-tenured employees who consistently deliver high-quality work are frequently overlooked. Their feedback, which often challenges flawed SOPs or targets, is unwelcome. Recognition Is Superficial: Occasional praise in meetings or a name on a slide is the extent of acknowledgement. Quality contributions are not typically followed by actionable support or promotion unless they are actively self-marketed. Missed Learning Opportunities: Upper management rarely consults experienced specialists for genuine insights or best practices. Instead, newer, more outspoken staff are chosen to represent the company, even when their ideas have been tried and failed before.

avatar
Frontiers Response
10mo
Thank you for sharing your thoughts. As with any business, targets are set for teams, and we recognise appropriately colleagues who are ambitious and who meet or exceed targets, BUT we never reward cutting corners that diminish quality or integrity, which are Frontiers’ core principles. We have one of the largest research integrity teams in the industry and our quality focus can be scrutinized by anybody due to our transparent and open publishing procedures. We are also dedicated to maintaining an open, transparent culture where every employee feels empowered to voice their thoughts and concerns at any time. If you would like to discuss your experience further, please reach out to your Manager, Head of Department, or Head of Human Resources. Your feedback is invaluable, and we are here to support you.
1.0
Apr 9, 2024

kindergarten

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Youthful, global, graduate/postgraduate talented colleagues. Decent pay and benefits which generally improved. Remote work which was fairly flexible .

Cons

Stale CEOs need those youthful and educated employees to help them to feel good about themselves. I felt like a newbie even when newer starters joined. Once the department had doubled in size it became clear that the only future for me was to work like a donkey so that the chosen ones would not have to and to train said chosen ones to replace me. As the department grew the environment became increasingly unpleasant, 'competitive'. Required to make up time taken off even when signed off with a GP sick/fit note but still penalised for taking time off by cold management, 'if you can't do the work we can get others to do it'. You will be asked for your ideas and suggestions but unless you fit in you will not be credited for those ideas and suggestions worth merit. Instead this is like a way to harvest as much value from each employee as possible before kicking them to the kerb. Hard work will not help you to get on if you do not 'fit in'. If you don't fit in you will find that there won't be room for you at the company parties. My mental and physical health have suffered as a result of working with this company, in some ways it has been the best but in more and worse ways it has been the worst.

avatar
Frontiers Response
2y
Thank you for your feedback - it's important to us and we'll take it on board. We're sorry to hear your concerns. It's essential every employee feels valued and part of our growth and we certainly aim to ensure the right people get credit for their good ideas. We do want to clarify that we prioritize health and wellbeing and every team member's right to sick leave is respected without impact on their roles or responsibilities.
2.0
Mar 24, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Lovely, talented, colleagues and decent (if slow moving) salaries. Flexible WFH policy

Cons

Upper management believed their own PR, made a series of calamitous mistakes and the company is now unpleasant to work for. In the past year, roles and policies have changed very regularly. These changes were rushed as a result of upper management’s existential panic about the company, and were implemented without adequate consideration for how employees would be able to adapt to them. Employees were asked for feedback about each change but at no stage has it felt that that feedback had any meaningful impact, and seems more like a tool to create manufactured consent for whatever upper management had planned. The corporate spin is relentless. Even the announcement of 600 redundancies was unveiled as a misty-eyed march towards a leaner -AI driven- future (cue the rat figure). The spin continues internally, with even the most overtly bad news coming with a side helping of the same saccharine piffle used in press releases.

avatar
Frontiers Response
2y
Thank you for taking the time to share your thoughts. Providing new and even more robust avenues for open communication is a focus for us this year. It has been incredibly difficult for everyone to go through a period of redundancies and there is no easy way to communicate such news. We were very transparent about our challenges, how to address them, as well as the future. Please contact feedback.ta@frontiersin.org if you would like to give any further feedback.
Viewing 103 - 105 of 564 Reviews

Glassdoor has 633 Frontiers reviews submitted anonymously by Frontiers employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Frontiers is right for you.