It used to be a nice place to work for - Anonymous employee Frontiers Employee Review

1.0
Jul 25, 2024
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good working hours, fantastic wfh adaptation, extremely nice people to work with, one of the most noble missions that a company can have.

Cons

Frontiers used to be one of the best places to work for. However, things gradually started getting worse after a certain point. My review here is a bit of a repetition to what others have already said: 1) continuous changes in our processes that after a certain point it was happening on a bi-weekly basis. 2)Policies in the peer review process that started becoming more and more aggressive towards our audiences.3) lack of transparency from senior management became the status quo for us (e,g saying or even promising something on a departmental meeting and then a few weeks later doing the exact opposite), 4) micro-management policies became the bread and butter constant for everyone by senior management. In general at this point it is such a pity that things ended up like this. It used to be such a nice place to work at.

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Frontiers Response
1y
Thank you for your feedback. It's great to hear you value our mission, which remains as important to us today as ever. Our strategies and decisions are always driven by this mission and we continuously adapt to ensure excellence. This means we try new things and pivot quickly, while we simultaneously remain committed to improving communication, refining peer review policies, and fostering a supportive work environment.

Explore other reviews about Frontiers

5.0
Dec 25, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good environment and place i recommend it

Cons

No cons for this place

4
2.0
Jul 6, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I will begin by stating that Frontiers has offered many exceptional opportunities. I have been able to travel as well as meet many new people throughout the publishing and academic fields. Frontiers also offers generous time off and sick days. That is, however, where I feel the benefits stop.

Cons

I have worked at Frontiers for nearly 4 years. During that time, my job title has changed at least 3 times, I have had 4 different managers, been forced into secondment, had my role expanded without compensation, and been denied career advancement 3 times. This was all while working in the SAME role. When I first began working at Frontiers, my job title was Editor Specialist. This role no longer exists. Instead, they chose to combine it with another role meaning now I am working a job previously done by 2 people without additional compensation. For 2 of my nearly 4 years at Frontiers, my salary was frozen, along with my colleagues'. When we WERE given pay raises, they were so minor that they did not justify the expanded role obligations that continued to come. Now, they have moved to a bonus scheme instead of standard, stable raises, which only rewards the top workers. Regarding targets, they are incredibly difficult to hit and require over exhausting our research network and putting pressure on authors, editors, and reviewers. You will be asked to meet these difficult targets or be put on a performance plan. It is not only a humiliating and defeating process, but one that destroys the confidence of even the hardest working among us. There are hardly any opportunities for advancement. If you wish to advance, you will need to EXCEED the already difficult targets as well as take on A LOT of supplemental work outside of your job description. Lastly, a couple of years ago there was a mass layoff. I watched 600 of my colleagues be let go, dismissed, and laughed at during all hands meetings. When we asked for accountability in upper management, as we had been warning them of patterns we were seeing for a while and no one listened, we were laughed at by the CEO in front of the entire company and asked if we wanted to see "heads roll" (as in firing in UM). Upper management is disconnected from their employees and treat us like output machines. We are pushed to heavily rely on AI and then expected to work harder alongside it. We are exhausted, defeated, and barely treading water.

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