Flexport reviews

3.6

65% would recommend to a friend

(1,175 total reviews)
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Ryan Petersen

82% approve of CEO

54% positive business outlook

Flexport has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 1,175 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Flexport employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Transportation & Logistics industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

1K reviews
2.0
May 12, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Very exciting industry and you can learn a lot about a new industry.

Cons

Terrible management. Very cliquey at the top. Ryan is a workaholic and believes everyone at the company should be as well. We're talking 12 to 14 hour days + be on call, responsive when you aren't there. If you don't have slack on your phone you're 90% of the way to being let go. Sanne comes from years of consulting and is decent at moving chess pieces but doesn't actually get much done. Surprising that Ryan sees as much as he does. Ben is delusional. Great sales person but should never be in charge of overseeing people. He has no idea how to handle adversity and just tries to buy his way out of problems. All in all, they aren't bad people, they just believe they know everything. When it comes to doing "the right thing" they could care less about their employees. I would steer clear of this place if you're looking for any kind of work, life balance or ability to make an impact.

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Flexport Response
9y
Ryan Petersen here, CEO of Flexport. Something struck me as off about this review as soon as I saw myself described as a "workaholic." Nobody has ever called me that, and anyone who knows me or worked with me will find it funny. Also we have not lost a salesperson in 11 months so I suspect this person is not who they claim to be. That said, it is true that our team works really hard. We grew revenues 60% again this month (May 2017 vs April 2017) and have maintained ~20% compound monthly growth for over 3 years. Hard work is the price of working at one of the fastest growing companies in Silicon Valley. It's simply not true, however, that we don't care about our people. We've designed our entire organization around cross-functional autonomous teams that are empowered to make decisions without requiring instruction or permission from above. Our goal is for these teams to behave like immune cells, where they see a problem and attack it, rather than forming a committee to get approval from a "clique" at the top of the company. We also have a large and growing team dedicated to enablement, training, and process improvement, who conduct workshops to identify problems and help the teams find solutions through new product features or processes. We do performance reviews quarterly using the "nine blocks" methodology, providing objective findings to every employee so they know where they sit and what they need to get ahead. And our global rotational program each quarter gives 5-10 of our stars at all levels of the org the opportunity to transfer to a new function or geography. We believe in developing well rounded, cross functional people who understand all aspects of our business. Our model works—we maintained an NPS in the mid-60s for over a year since we started measuring it. Our Culture Amp scores from our confidential internal surveys routinely show that we are in the top few percentile for employee engagement. And we wouldn't be ranked the 4th best place to work in the SF Bay Area this year if Flexport was as this poster describes. In the end, the thing I'm most proud about in building Flexport is our investments in our people, culture, and organizational design. We have built an organization that empowers people to get work done without the BS bureaucracy that cripples so many companies. And it's precisely that culture of autonomy that allows me to not have to be a workaholic. I'm sorry that it didn't work out for the original poster. High-paced startups aren't for everybody. I wish him or her well in future endeavors though. PS I always use neatly formed paragraphs when I write too, this site just sucks at formatting.
1.0
Sep 26, 2016

SMOKE AND MIRRORS

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The lower level employees are nice and personable. Ops and sales. We feel we are a part of something big. Recent graduates from great schools. Like many of Flexport's own articles claim "what's logistics?" People just don't know. We too, are just figuring out what that means. Fun but complicated. Free lunches.

Cons

Where do I begin? Zero stars. - Survey confidential - a hoax. They know exactly who wrote what. Now everyone is intimidated and write only positive reviews, including here on this site. - Lack of work life balance - part of it is because the learning curve is by and large abysmal. Another part is because the claim of "technology" keeps us efficient. False. - Stay away from crossing the COO. He wants puppets. If you challenge or disagree with him, you get fired. - Don't talk to your colleagues of any dissatisfaction. A few who pretend to be your friend will stab you later. - Upper management has a high level of distrust in their employees. - Internal Silos. Although the mission is to change the user experience, to the outside world is good. We work long hours to keep great customer service. Inside, not efficient. - I hear this industry has many regulations. Are we within the law? That is the question. - Play your politics the best you can. Become a politician. In summary, not a good place unless you are in product or come in top management approved by the COO who runs the company in fear. I hope to save you from a mistake.

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Flexport Response
9y
Thanks for your feedback. I’m glad you like the intellectual challenge and people around you. That said, we should address some things. Joining a startup, especially when you are joining from the existing freight industry, is not easy. Our mindset is different, our pace is different and we are building the future rather than celebrating the past. That comes with curiosity, ambiguity, anxiety and for most of us lot of fun and a sense of pride. We are very proud that we’ve hired an extremely talented team that sees that we’re changing the world, following our mission to fix the user experience in global trade. To respond on some specific comments: “we’re figuring out what logistics means”. There are two answers so that: 1. Yes, we’re figuring out what the future of logistics means. This is an industry that hasn’t fundamentally changed and we are reinventing it. 2. No, our clients reward us with a 75 NPS score, our primary KPI to measure business success. That’s a different league than the old world, which is on average rewarded with a minus 35. It seems that the clients validate that we really know what customer service and logistics means. The survey: Our KPIs are simple, beyond client happiness (NPS) we spend a lot of time on employee happiness. We use surveys, talk a lot and have weekly all hands where you can submit anonymous questions. These crucial HR functions are facilitated with tools, for instance Culture Amp. Culture Amp is 100% anonymous, you can check their terms here: https://academy.cultureamp.com/hc/en-us/articles/205198325-Survey-Formats. Work-Life balance: this is a sensitive topic, because you are right. We work too hard. And we try everything to make that more balanced. If the company grows by 25% per month, it’s just hard to keep up. We hire people and invest in technology. That said, it could be better. We are transforming an industry, that doesn’t happen overnight and without effort. Hence the employee survey to monitor happiness. Stay away from crossing the COO, he wants puppets: Wow, please come talk to me (although I’m afraid you left us a couple of months ago). For others, please step up to me. We are a group of insanely smart people that should share all insights. We have a culture of innovation, where we empower our employees to prototype, challenge the status quo and ask the question why. Why? Because it makes us better. Read more about our philosophy in The Maverick, a book by Ricardo Semler, also great on TED. Or find copies on my desk. On firing: we hate firing, especially when we just spent months of training in this highly regulated and super complex industry. That is not rational. But we let people go, just like any other company: the performance is not there, the drive lacks or we can’t make it work together. Fortunately our attrition is very low. On stabbing: we have a strong values based system that has been designed with all our employees: 1) empower the client, 2) practice candor, 3) fill the gap and 4) play the long game. Stabbing is not part of that. Talking about dissatisfaction is part of that, because it makes us stronger. Upper management has a high level of distrust in their employees: This one is funny, especially combined with the frustration about internal silos. We don’t have functions (silos), because we work in a modern customer facing organization. This model has a couple of goals: 1) be customer facing, 2) reduce transaction costs between functional roles, 3) empower to contribute meaningfully, instead of being layered in a functional org and 4) treat you all like business owners and adults. Industry with many regulations: 100%, this is a highly regulated industry. We spent 5 years on getting all the licenses. We invest in compliance, simply because we value border protection and safety on planes and ships. We’ve also grown our compliance team by 300% in the last months. All government audits, and we’ve gotten many more as a new entrant, we have passed easily. Our customs brokers are licensed and work under supervision of the Chairman of the Board of Northern Californian Customs Brokers. Politics: We aim to create a culture of meritocracy where we reward people based on their merits and they achievements. We are launching a quarterly calibration process, empowering managers to make promotion decisions since they have context into an individual’s performance. On top of that we are rewarding our employees with opportunities to rotate globally and functionally. We hope everybody feels comfortable to share feedback with us, preferably in a way we can directly address it. Practice candor and avoid politics. We are just under 200 employees, so there is always somebody from the leadership or HR team around to discuss. Email me [first name]@flexport.com, Sanne (the evil COO :)
1.0
Aug 13, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-You will become an expert in Supply Chain Logistics in this role (because you have to do everything lol) -Catered lunch -Healthcare is great -Interesting folks to work with

Cons

-This is not a tech company. Do not be fooled. This is a logistics company that is selling automation to their investors but cannot deliver on this goal anytime soon due to the complexity of this role. You will get to use a cool platform but every date, schedule etc must be inputted by a physical person. -No Promotions! All lateral moves. You will get additional responsibility with no pay increase. And it's already salaried which means Flexport wins and you lose. -I got 55k base with 10k potential bonus. It sounds good at first for logistics right? Except it's salaried. You will work for every dime. They make it seem like its above industry standard but if you work 60+ hours a week.. you do the math. -no work life balance. They will make a fuss everytime you want to take a work from home day and look at you sideways if you try to leave early to beat traffic. -Culture is just a fancy word for peer pressure to work you to death. It's also a fancy word for they are ready to fire you at any moment if you don't follow unspoken rules. Seen people get fired for no reason at all except that they were a "bad culture fit."

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Flexport Response
7y
Thanks for your feedback. At Flexport, we value speaking candidly and believe in listening to others’ opinions. I’m disappointed that your experience at Flexport didn’t match our commitment to being the best place to build and grow a career. We agree that our employees are interesting, passionate, and hard working. That said, since joining the company in April, one of my focuses has been to evaluate both work/life balance and career development and progression at Flexport. I’m happy to say that we are making progress in both of these areas with plans for continued improvement. As a technology-enabled freight forwarder, we very much see ourselves as a tech company. We also know there will be manual work in the interim, as we continue to build automation into our platform. It is through the incredible work of our team and the feedback they give that will continue to drive the digitization of this industry. Again, we’re disheartened that your time here wasn’t aligned with your expectations but are grateful for your honest feedback.
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