TetraScience Reviews

3.9

68% would recommend to a friend

(50 total reviews)

Patrick Grady

68% approve of CEO

66% positive business outlook

TetraScience has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 50 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The TetraScience employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Pharmaceutical and biotechnology industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

50 reviews
2.0
24 May 2022

CEO is off his rocker

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

People are motivated to pay down tech debt Coworkers are caring and have eachothers best interest at heart

Cons

The CEO is drunk at the wheel. He routinely subjects the company to multi-hour long rants every week about how the world is ending and all his geopolitical beliefs. He is so out of touch with reality and what employees want out of a CEO that it is actively driving away new hires and current employees. Any confidence I have had in this company vanishes more and more every time he speaks each week.

avatar
TetraScience Response
4y
Unserious companies ignore snarky, inaccurate, unprofessional, and ad hominem posts like this, naively believing that these types of cultural cancers will go away if ignored. As a serious team, and one guided in all we do by our values, we know that cultural cancers metastasize if not treated quickly. Per our categorical commitment to transparency in all we do, we fully subscribe to Supreme Court Justice Louis D. Brandeis' famous quote: “Sunlight is said to be the best of disinfectants.” It's in this spirit that I'd like to note a number of important items for those considering joining Team Tetra: First, this post stands in vivid contrast - in substance and tone - to all of the preceding 5-star reviews and unambiguous endorsements of the company, culture, and leadership team, which I've been proud to lead since early 2021. I would encourage you to review the totality of reviews since that time to gain better insights into who we are as leaders and an organization. Second, and rather notably, given the backdrop of geopolitical instability (war), macroeconomic deterioration (inflation), capital markets dislocation ($12T in losses this year), and the "tech wreck" (EMCLOUD: - 50%), this deeply disgruntled employee’s original post will not age well as it stands in isolation from the reality of the world around us. The basis for my two 2-hour all-hands meetings on current events is straightforward: As CEO, I have the awesome responsibility of leading Team Tetra in building this company in pursuit of our mission. I can’t lead Team Tetra if they’re not prepared, and they can’t possibly be prepared if they don’t have the vital data and critical context to inform how we should respond to this new world dynamic. To not have thorough discussions of the real world, and its direct impact on our company, would be an abdication of my responsibilities and a recipe for disaster for each of our employees, their families, and all of our stakeholders. It is this serious approach to company building which has enabled us to grow at a best-in-class rate, be highly capital efficient, and have world-class employee retention metrics. We will not deviate from this in response to a cultural variant with a personal agenda. The hiring and interviewing process in any company is fraught with information asymmetry – i.e., the candidate has perfect information into who they really are vis-à-vis skill and will and character, while the company has little to go on other than the candidate’s word; and the company has perfect information into its values, operational and financial data, and overall business, while the candidate has little. I go to uncommon lengths to ensure that we close this information gap by being radically transparent and consistent with candidates on all fronts. We share more data with candidates than any company I’m aware of and we answer any and all questions they put forth. I do this to set the candidate and TetraScience up for success. Implicit in this engagement is a quid pro quo pursuant to which the candidate, armed with all of this data, will in turn be self-aware and reflect upon whether this company, its values, ethos, and culture are truly aligned with who they are as a person. Unfortunately, this individual knowingly and willingly ignored our unambiguous allegiance to our values and our unwavering commitment to being a serious team and joined regardless. To wit: We actively seek out and screen for resilience, yet this employee is triggered by geopolitical and economic reality. We actively seek out and screen for fearlessness, yet this employee hides behind the cloak of Glassdoor anonymity. We actively seek out and screen for commitment to craft, yet this employee is repelled by the very data which is necessary to improve our position in light of market conditions. We actively seek out and screen for those who embrace and manifest trust and collaboration, yet this employee actively seeks to undermine the foundations of our mutual trust and collaboration. We actively seek out and screen for those who can be constructive and kind in their feedback, yet this employee devolved to ad hominem attacks. We actively seek out and screen for serious professionals who seek to be elite, yet this is possibly the most unserious act I’ve seen in my career. While this individual has set themselves and Team Tetra up for failure by joining a company they don’t understand or align with, we share equally in this responsibility as an organization. We clearly lowered our cultural bar in order to fill a position. Doing this invariably leads to churn, lower employee satisfaction, and compromised execution. On balance, we have done an amazing job in identifying culture fits. We missed this one; and badly. We will do better. - Patrick
2.0
30 Jan 2024

Glad to be gone

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Amazing co-workers who are all trying their best to make the company succeed, will always provide a helping hand when possible.

Cons

Had to be on a small call with the CEO as per his request with a small group of people, all that was asked was that we be prepared to discuss something. We all join the call and begin to speak, he then basically tells us to screw off and that we were “unprepared” to “discuss” because we didn’t bring a PowerPoint presentation, not sure why discussing something requires a PowerPoint… So he hung up on all of us. No exaggeration I started applying to new positions immediately after this call due to the disrespect.

2.0
6 May 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Has potential as the product is really needed by the Pharma industry. The industry, product, and people are great. Smart people building trying to build a good product (if leadership can support and get out of the way).

Cons

- Constantly misses sales target. - Bad C-Level leadership....for example, key founder and C-Level who doesn't know how to lead or build enterprise SaaS solution. - No career advancement. They treat people as if they should be thankful to be working for them and keep piling on more work without acknowledging successes with promotions or salary increases. - Below market salaries and benefits.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 50 Reviews

Glassdoor has 59 TetraScience reviews submitted anonymously by TetraScience employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if TetraScience is right for you.