Great products, great people, leadership is catching up - Anonymous employee Curology Employee Review

4.0
12 May 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I joined because I believe in the mission of making dermatology more accessible, and I still believe in it. The products actually work, which matters a lot. It's not always the case that you get to work somewhere where what you're selling is something you'd recommend to your own family. The people here are the best part. My coworkers are some of the smartest, most talented people I've worked with, and they're also curious, hardworking, and genuinely kind. There's a real culture of collaboration across teams, and most folks bring good intent and care to what they do. I've also been lucky to have a manager who invests in my growth, which has made a big difference for me. The benefits are solid, and for me personally the work-life balance has been great. Curology has been a really good place to be as a parent, and I don't take that for granted. There's a lot of good intent across the company, and I see teams doing strong work even when resources are stretched. When people are trusted to run with something, the output is usually really good.

Cons

The biggest thing to know going in is that a lot of your experience here depends on which team and manager you land with. The company doesn't have strong consistency across the org on some of the things that matter most, so the same job title can look pretty different depending on where you sit. Leadership: Some leaders are excellent, they trust their teams and let people do the work they were hired to do. Others get pretty in the weeds and lean reactive. Transparency around how decisions get made could be better, and so could consistency in how accountability shows up across levels. Career growth: Because we're a lean org, you'll wear a lot of hats, move fast, and learn a ton in a short period of time, which is genuinely valuable. The flip side is that there isn't much formal recognition for that work, and development plans aren't standardized. How much growth you actually get really depends on your manager. HR does a great job with onboarding, but managers tend to be pretty hands off during that period, so how quickly you ramp up depends a lot on how much you can figure out on your own. Work-life balance: PTO is generous on paper, but because it's discretionary, how it actually plays out depends a lot on your team and your manager. Some teams use it freely and some don't. A lot of teams also end up working evenings or weekends fairly regularly, so the balance piece really varies depending on where you sit. Start-up culture: The pace and resource strain are real, and the response to that has sometimes felt more reactive than strategic. This can be fun and exciting for some, and i certainly love the possibilities this environment brings, but because of how decisions are made here, it can create some friction and some timelines that seem to shift often. Clearer priorities from the top would help a lot.

Explore other reviews about Curology

5.0
4 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great team, culture, benefits, and cross team collaboration.

Cons

Nothing so far, but only been here a few months now.

1.0
9 Feb 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Many talented, hardworking people across teams who care deeply about doing quality work.

Cons

Turnover is extremely high. In my first year alone, close to 30 engineers left, along with many contributors across other teams. Several people left without another role lined up, which speaks volumes about the environment. The culture is unhealthy. Expectations and goals shift constantly. Employees are asked to grind and deliver high-quality work, but then receive poor performance reviews when priorities change or expectations are redefined after the fact. People rarely raise concerns openly; instead, speculation and complaints happen behind closed doors due to the lack of psychological safety. Many employees are burned out or clearly heading toward burnout, with little acknowledgment or support from leadership. Despite public messaging about culture and growth, the day-to-day reality is chaotic, under-resourced, and demoralizing. The gap between how leadership presents the company and how it actually feels to work here is significant.

5
avatar
Curology Response
4mo
Thank you for taking the time to share your experience and for the work you contributed while at Curology. We’re glad you highlighted the many talented, hardworking people across teams. That commitment to quality and to our patients remains a core strength of our company. You’re right that the past year has involved significant change. We are in the midst of a broader transformation by sharpening our strategy, evolving leadership, and raising the bar on how we operate. That level of change can feel intense, and at times disruptive. The goal, however, is greater clarity, stronger accountability, and a more durable foundation for long-term success. We don’t take concerns about burnout, shifting priorities, or psychological safety lightly. As part of this transformation, we’ve been investing in clearer goal-setting, more consistent performance practices, and improved planning routines to better align expectations with resources. While not every characterization reflects today’s environment, we know we have to continually earn trust through transparency and follow-through. We wish you the best in your next chapter.
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