Culture left the building - Marketing Manager Cytiva Employee Review

1.0
7 Dec 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

There are still a few good people to work with. The marketing department as a whole seems to band together in a PTSD like trance, hoping for better times, but every day another person seems to leave.

Cons

Worklife balance is awful, headcount is not backfilled and responsibilities are pushed to others with no rewards. There is limited opportunity and people often get promoted without jobs being advertised, it's very dependent on who you know and speak to rather than fair opportunity. Danaher is mandating a return to the office 5 days a week and gated access is now in most buildings to monitor the time employees spend there. CEO Chris Riley directed we focus on employing people on site rather than the right candidate for the role. It's been publicity communicated that those working remotely and those with caring roles have made "career limiting choices". Meetings often end with sniping and shouting as in pressure builds. Planning meetings have left many employees in tears, several members of staff have been on long term sick leave due to stress levels. Processes are very beurocratic and slow. Annual review ratings are pushed down to reduce bonuses, so individual performance is not rewarded. It's the worst example of gaslighting, where the company tells you they care about your mental health, diversity, sustainability etc but everything they put in place seems to work against what is said.

Explore other reviews about Cytiva

5.0
26 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Supportive organizational culture, excellent flexibility for graduate student workloads, personalized/customizable project opportunities, and exceptional exposure to cross-functional industry leaders. Supportive Culture: From the very first interview, the collaborative and highly supportive culture that defines Cytiva's organizational DNA was completely transparent. Upper management leading the program is actively invested in creating and scaling resources to address intern needs while demonstrating a genuine commitment to our long-term career development. Genuine Work-Life Balance: The program managers were highly flexible with our schedules and completely understanding of our demanding workloads as graduate students. They found a great balance, equipping us with vital commercial and technical skills while remaining mindful of our academic commitments, always ensuring our graduate responsibilities came first. Immense Value & Customization: Rather than locking interns into a rigid, one-size-fits-all curriculum, the program empowers students to tailor their experience based on their specific territory goals, desired skill sets, and scheduling needs. While managers proactively equip interns with structured frameworks like 30-60-90 day development plans, the execution is highly dynamic. The program allows the flexibility to pivot toward self-directed, high-impact projects (such as strategic grant prospecting, territory mapping, or localized lead-generation pipelines) ensuring every intern can directly impact their regional sales team while maximizing their unique strengths. High-Level Exposure: Beyond individual territory work, the program offers invaluable networking opportunities and cross-functional industry connections. Cytiva actively hosts structured workshops and panels featuring Directors and Global Product Managers across diverse business units. For incoming career searchers like me, this level of corporate visibility provides a look into the realities of commercial strategy, product management, and corporate leadership. Ultimately, the UCR program does a great job of transforming technical academic backgrounds into effective, solution-oriented commercial roles. It bridges complex science with executive business concepts, all while accommodating the realities of graduate school workloads.

Cons

Since the program is decentralized, structure varies heavily by territory. The day-to-day management style is predominantly hands-off. Initial frameworks (like 30-60-90 day plans) often shift to accommodate real-time field needs rather than rigid timelines. Success requires a high degree of autonomy, self-starting initiative, and the ability to thrive without constant, structured oversight.

1.0
28 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Flexibility has always been good. They pay well but you will stagnate in experience if you join here which will garuntee that you will never be able to move on.

Cons

Progression is poor Within my 5 year tenure, there has been a management change in each year which continues to only add scope to the role of employees below that. Now my manager is redundant and we are managed by someone in another country who couldn't care less. We can literally do nothing and there would be no consequences. Since the merger, many of the smartest have left. The company continues to look for cost cutting measures where teams are now halved to what they were at the start of my time here. The processes since the merger have all doubled. Any attempts to correct things by management have only worsened things.

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