Frontiers reviews

2.7

33% would recommend to a friend

(566 total reviews)
avatar

Kamila Markram

29% approve of CEO

30% positive business outlook

Frontiers has an employee rating of 2.7 out of 5 stars, based on 566 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

566 reviews
3.0
Jun 10, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Nice people and if you are lucky with your project you can enjoy a lot of freedom in order to add value to the company.

Cons

It is a bit wild place to work, and you need to be lucky with management, because you can get micro manage real quick

avatar
Frontiers Response
2y
Thank you for sharing your experience. We're dedicated to providing a supportive and empowering environment for all team members and provide ongoing coaching for all of our managers to foster this environment.
2.0
Jun 7, 2024

Great people, not so great Leadership

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- The people are fantastic - The company mission - Generous benefits - Fully remote working

Cons

- Toxic positivity - Deluded senior leadership - Long and outdated 40hr working week, they will claim that being fully remote allows for a flexible and healthy work life balance but when the working hours are 8:30 to 5:30, there's not much of the day left to utilise this flexibility! - The large scale recent layoffs - No pay review or bonus despite apparently being financially stable - Feels like a sinking ship, I hope I am wrong as the great people combined with the company mission *should* make this a brilliant place to work

avatar
Frontiers Response
2y
Thank you for your comments. We take pride in fostering a mission-driven environment full of great people. Offering a good work-life balance is important to us: and like the majority of businesses, we operate a standard 40-hour work week. The redundancies were an incredibly difficult time, but it was a necessary action to ensure longevity and that we can continue on our mission that we are all so passionate about.
2.0
Jun 3, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good people to work with day to day Flexible working arrangements Some positions quite well paid (possibly overpaid) Good technology/IT equipment Good office environment if you ever do need to go in

Cons

I worked for Frontiers for 2 years and despite over 25% of the company being made redundant the company is still very much run in the same way. I'm sure leadership have learned some lessons, afterall they are very smart people but this has not translated at all to any sort of organisational change in culture or strategy. At Frontiers it is the leaderships way or the highway. Of course, no company can lead from the ground up but at Frontiers any sort of comment which goes against the leadership direction of travel is either ignored or worse still agreed with but then goes into a black hole. I was in countless meetings where the entire group (including members of the leadership team) agreed with valid points raised by team members about potential issues but in terms of addressing them, the answer was just to plough on and attempt to hit what was normally a ludacris target. This led to serious cultural issues where leadership implemented projects with no consultation with team members actually doing the work only to then bemoan them not succeeding. There were an infinite number of projects where based on historial norms over many years of 5%-10% success rate, targets of over 50% were expected. This created more toxicity as on the projects team members just felt entirely unmotivated and didn't actually try legitimately new ideas as they knew they'd never make the target expected. Due to these challenges there is very little motivation for staff to turn the ship around and improve things even though that is 100% what Frontiers needs and I actually believe the leadership wants. However, the leadership needs to let department leaders lead and not interfere and ask for sign off on even the smallest of things. Any attempts to say this is not what happens are either a lie by leadership or a lie by the department leaders as this is the message that comes through down to those on the ground. I hope the company can recover, despite all of its challenges in the last 18 months it still is one of the most popular places to publish. It's not too late to recover but leadership needs to turn the company into a proper organisation that reflects its size of 1500-2500 employees and not run it like a company of 100 people. I suspect this is why it is hard for the leadership team as they had such success when the company was much smaller, and this success was incredible. However, to turn Frontiers into a reputable organisation changes need to be made. As hard as it is to believe, I have tried to be constructive in this review!

avatar
Frontiers Response
2y
Thank you for your thoughts - it's good to hear you enjoyed many aspects of working at Frontiers. We take on board your constructive comments about focusing on strategic issues rather than details. Our leadership team works hard to balance strategic oversight with empowering their teams. Team members at all levels are involved in developing new projects and setting appropriate targets. We know our targets are ambitious, but we have a successful track record over many years of achieving them. It's this push for high standards that has helped us become a leading scientific publisher. Please feel free to email feedback.ta@frontiersin.org if you'd like to continue the conversation.
Viewing 130 - 132 of 566 Reviews

Glassdoor has 635 Frontiers reviews submitted anonymously by Frontiers employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Frontiers is right for you.