Poorly Run - Software Engineer Labviva Employee Review

1.0
Jan 27, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Parking is paid for. Good pay.

Cons

Riddled with a multitude of problems starting with being a company that claims to champion diversity but is comprised of 90% white males. Along with that immediately after raising Series A decides to move into a huge unnecessary office regardless of the fact that most employees work remote, talks with this office included building out their own gym even though a gym was already in the building. On its own not a big deal but paired with the fact that they aren’t profitable but also they performed layoffs shortly after moving into this office it’s clear that Labviva is going to run itself into the ground from a financial standpoint. Product itself is nothing innovative so no edge in the market.

Explore other reviews about Labviva

5.0
Nov 18, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Labviva is a genuinely great place to work. The company has built a culture that feels both positive and collaborative, people here really care about each other and about the mission. There’s a strong emphasis on diversity, inclusion, and creating space for everyone’s ideas to be heard. You’re encouraged to bring your full self to work, and leadership models that openness every day. The environment is fast-paced (it’s a growing startup!) but it’s also supportive. Colleagues are smart, driven, and approachable, and there’s a real sense of teamwork across departments. The leadership team is transparent and accessible, they communicate through all hands meetings and are genuinely invested in professional development and employee well-being.

Cons

Typical growing pains of a scaling startup, but leadership listens and acts on feedback.

1.0
May 6, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

good dev ops team, fun problem sovling

Cons

The culture tends to be insular — social dynamics are cliquey and it can be difficult to break into established groups, especially as a newer employee. There were also noticeable patterns in layoff decisions that raised serious questions about equity and fairness. On the engineering side, there's a persistent misalignment between product and engineering that creates friction and slows execution. A significant amount of time gets directed toward efforts that don't move the needle, which becomes demoralizing when you're trying to do meaningful work. Also very clearly racist.

1
See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All