Pros
-Provides monthly lunch and daily fruits and snacks for employees -Likes to hire fresh grads -Location is by the water and accessible through public transportation -If you're willing to believe it, the work can be interesting -Some staff are cool and friendly Acumen is a government contractor that works in the healthcare space, which means they're not going to run out of business any time soon. As bad as COVID is, it did give Acumen more business, and they were lucky enough to not have to lay off anybody (more on that later). When at the office, the administrative staff are friendly and nice and will take time to keep the office tidy and clean. If you can become friends with them and IT staff, your time at Acumen will be less hellish. For whatever reason, Acumen tends to hire more fresh grads, so you'll have an easier time interviewing here than other companies. They're willing to train people to do their jobs (as most companies should), so you don't have to have a ton of prior experience. If you can fix your mindset a certain way, the work can be interesting, especially if you can look at the unique situations that people go through with their healthcare.
Cons
-Very apathetic and, at times, toxic, company culture -Infrastructure and technologies are very old, leading to ineffective practices and operations -Shockingly low pay and diminishing benefits -Career development is minimal -Inexperienced managers, and leadership is a joke -Turnover is ridiculously high -Nepotism is very prevalent Aside from the on-the-surface and superficial pros, though, unless you're a higher-up or in the MaCurdy inner circle, that's where your luck runs out. Although Acumen tends to hire fresh grads, they fail at retaining staff. Turnover is very, very high, and management either ignores it or lies to themselves about why turnover is so high at all. In fact, turnover was/is so bad, management decided to offer quarterly bonuses to people, with the incentive to stay being the bonuses stack more the longer you stay. The problem is this bonus is based off of your salary, so every quarter, you get an extra couple hundred taxable dollars added to your paycheck. Because it's so negligible, you don't even notice it being added to your paycheck. Where did the money come from? They slashed some 401k benefits. Was it a fair trade? The still-high turnover says all you need to know. To top it all off, HR actually tells themselves that people leave because they want to continue their education or some other nonsensical excuse. Very few people stay for more than a year, which nobody faults them for. As a company, Acumen fails to understand what its employees truly want. Many things are outside of the company's control, but it certainly does not help their case. Because Acumen works a lot with the government, their technology and infrastructure have to be on the government's level as well, making it very old and unusable in many cases. The building doesn't even have Wi-Fi! Everybody is given a workstation and a computer they log in to (even while working remotely). What you get is very slow connection because of all the hoops you have to jump through to even start working. You don't need me to tell you how slow and dysfunctional that would be. The company does NOT issue laptops for remote work. About COVID and 2020, the company failed to grasp the gravity of everything and instead opted for tone-deaf and apathetic answers. I don't entirely blame them, as COVID was and and still is a unique situation. As an established company, though, everybody expected more. Before the state-wide lockdown, leadership had one of the company's senior researchers give a presentation on what COVID was and how people should be dealing with it, with the central theme of the message being, "It's not a big deal, and everybody should continue coming to work anyway. Our work is important, and it allows us to fight COVID in our own way." Most companies were already telling their employees they could start working remotely. After the talk, HR sent out an email to all employees saying that the company policy continued to be, "We don't have people work from home as a rule. We know our best work is done very collaboratively and at this time we need to be efficient and effective. Currently the benefits of working together far outweigh the costs." This was not even a week before the governor issued a state-wide lockdown, and Tom MaCurdy, the CEO, finally sent an email telling everybody working remotely was allowed. Talk about mixed signals. After that, we didn't hear anything from management until a month and a half later, when the COO would hold a town hall meeting for everybody to submit questions, only to give non-answers and that they would continue to manage the situation. When speaking to recruiters from other companies, they mentioned their leaders would hold weekly meetings to give updates on the company, including layoffs and other structural changes. How did I find out Acumen didn't lay off anybody? A friend in HR told me, not through a company update. Acumen continues to give monthly updates about COVID, but each update is always "We don't have anything new to share." In regards to George Floyd and the movements, the COO was silent for a few weeks, and his long-awaited email's theme was, "I am very upset, but I hope you all remember that our work continues to be important and that we need to keep at it." Acumen's leadership fails at a systemic level. At this point, you might wonder if maybe things are better on the team level. Maybe, if you're lucky. I've seen teams at Acumen thrive, and that's largely because they have good managers. However, it's very clear that Tom's management style trickles down to everybody, and company culture suffers as a result. If your team doesn't interact with Tom much, great. If you do, however, expect inexperienced managers and nepotism at its finest. People who don't do much for the team are promoted to senior titles, whereas the people who do the most work are stuck in their entry-level positions. Why? Because some employees are funnier or are better at sucking up. But, even getting promoted doesn't mean much, because many positions have only two tiers of promotions. After going from entry-level to senior to lead, there is no more career development. What do people who work the hardest get? Maybe a minimal raise. It's possible that you get lucky and get a manager who actually cares about the welfare of the team, but even so, they are limited by what they can do for the team because of company policies. You can find more comments about Tom if you look through these reviews, but the general consensus (even throughout the company) is he changes his mind depending on what day it is and has a thunderous attitude and temper. I don't know why he thinks it's fine to yell at his employees, which you can actually hear even when on a different floor. In an area and age where companies want to move forward, Acumen enjoys staying still and not caring about its employees. You're welcome to try it out, but you'll quickly see that turnover is high for a reason.