Dysfunctional - Anonymous employee Prime Therapeutics Employee Review

1.0
20 May 2016
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Comp and benefits are great.

Cons

There is a lot of focus on the changing C-suite, and meanwhile, middle-managers are doing whatever they want. The culture has shifted in the last few years from being a fun place to work that cares about employees to being so focused on the budget, and on management impressing the new leadership, that morale is in the toilet. Nothing is being done to address that elephant in the room, and if you dare to mention anything to management about the fact that the entire team is unhappy, you are deemed not a team player. You can also expect to work like a dog for years with the promise of a promotion, only to be denied any internal movement. "Career growth" is not in Prime's vocabulary.

Explore other reviews about Prime Therapeutics

5.0
22 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The work like balance, work environment, enthusiasm for the future.

Cons

Slow to change and barriers to get problems resolved.

2.0
12 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- VTO during non-peak season - Mandatory and Voluntary OT during peak season - Few calls per day - personable employees

Cons

- it’s nearly impossible to get hired on full-time. - as a contractor, you have no benefits and can’t partake in any of the company events or even give kudos to your colleagues. - the metrics are somewhat doable, but there are many technicalities that cause them to mess up a lot of the time. - Two months prior to being fired without warning, I was under the impression I was on a written warning, and not a final but was told I would get a follow up email letting me know about it and I never got that email. I did persist and ask about it a few weeks later and still had no follow up. - if you are a contractor, they will look for anything in your performance to fire you as soon as the peak season is over. A colleague was fired that same week due to suspicion of them having a mouse mover with no evidence provided. -I worked 12 hours a day, 7 days a week for two months straight with no days off until they made it mandatory to have at least one day off per week. - two days prior to me getting fired, in a meeting I was told that everything was looking great and that I was fine. It’s very odd how that tune changed abruptly.

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