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Azenta Life Sciences

Engaged employer

Seven Years Wasted - Anonymous Employee Azenta Life Sciences Employee Review

1.0
15 Aug 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great coworkers to trauma-bond with and decent benefits (though not enough)

Cons

Favoritism runs amok here. Whether or not you get a promotion is based on how well-liked or chummy you get with your boss rather than actual merit. Management here is a joke and HAS BEEN for YEARS. It literally took six years of working the same repetitive job and my manager quitting and being replaced to get my overdue promotion. I really should’ve left after two years. Management in Operations is especially clique-y with certain individuals being well-known for their cattiness towards the techs. Complaints more often than not get ignored by management. Upper management tells techs to escalate their issues with upper management if lower management ignores you, but the techs do not have time to play these political games. Not when they are already overworked and underpaid. Technicians are not the only ones who are underpaid either; managers, leads, client coordinators, and PMs are all put under a lot of pressure to put in a lot of work (for some more than their expected 8 hours/day) just to meet deadlines. For this labor, many are not compensated enough as many are struggling to pay the bills. The only ones doing ok financially are the CEO, the Board of Trustees, and their ilk, who care more about pleasing shareholders and lining their own pockets than making sure their employees are happy, healthy, and compensated (not only doing this because laws require them to). Also, at the Indianapolis site, there are multiple managers who are in romantic/sexual relationships with their coworkers. Isn’t this not allowed at other companies? I’m sure this unprofessional and unethical behavior won’t create any conflicts of interest in the foreseeable future (HEAVY sarcasm). In the laboratories, turnover for employees AND managers has been very high, creating a lot of stress for current staff who is left to clean up the messes their predecessors have left in their wake. Much stress also comes from the pressure to meeting client demands, no matter how ridiculous because Azenta cares more about making clients happy at the expense of their employees’ health and mental wellbeing.

Explore other reviews about Azenta Life Sciences

5.0
3 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I like the company and my job. Our team is great, leadership is supportive. The office is really nice. It is a good job

Cons

Nothing really important to mention.

4.0
9 Apr 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Collaboration: The cross-functional collaboration here is genuinely one of the stronger aspects of working at Azenta. Whether you're working across departments or geographies, people are generally willing to show up and work through problems together. It doesn't feel siloed the way a lot of companies do. Culture: The culture feels human. People actually seem to care about each other, which isn't something you can say everywhere. There's a level of psychological safety that makes it easier to speak up, take initiative, and do good work without constantly watching your back. Leadership: Leadership is visible and accessible in a way that's not always the case at companies this size. There's a genuine effort to communicate direction and keep people informed, and you can tell the people at the top actually care about the mission.

Cons

Compensation & Benefits: Compensation and benefits haven't kept pace with the market. For the level of skill and experience the company expects, the total package doesn't always reflect that. If you're coming from a larger org or comparing offers, it can be a sticking point. Onsite Presence: The expectation around onsite presence feels out of step with where the industry has landed post-pandemic. Flexibility is limited, and for roles where remote work is fully viable, the requirement to be in the office regularly doesn't always have a clear business justification. IT Equipment: You don't get much say in your hardware or software setup. For people who do their best work with specific tools or have preferences around operating systems and devices, the one-size-fits-all IT approach can be a real friction point, especially in roles that are heavily computer-dependent.

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