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Boundless Immigration

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Boundless Immigration Reviews

2.7

33% would recommend to a friend

(80 total reviews)
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Xiao Wang

30% approve of CEO

29% positive business outlook

Boundless Immigration has an employee rating of 2.7 out of 5 stars, based on 80 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Boundless Immigration employee rating is 30% below average for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

80 reviews
1.0
17 Feb 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I've met some of the kindest and smartest people of my career when I worked at Boundless. There are a bunch of empathetic and passionate people working together to help immigrants and build products for social. It takes an incredible amount of resilience to work in immigration, especially in a society crippled by white supremacy and a mismanaged pandemic. The engineering team was full of bright and driven folks who cared about the quality and security of the products we built. We pushed for better practices, accessible documentation, and mentorship. We tried to foster a flexible environment where everyone was celebrated for doing their best work and supported when they needed to be.

Cons

Boundless claims to be driven by its "immigrants first" tenet, but that was never reflected in my day-to-day. I have documented situations where employees were forced to lie to customers by their supervisor, including one where we accused UPS of misplacing a customer's entire application package, knowing that we had in fact not shipped it yet. When I left, our systems were riddled with security and privacy problems. For example, Boundless never deletes documents that users upload to our servers — yes, this means that if you uploaded copies of your social security card, passport, or bank statements, they will live on indefinitely. Every employee with access to our internal tools can view every single bit of information about any customer in our system — including our customers' children. There is no policy in place to protect the data of people whose relationships end if they're not the account holder, which is a vector for abuse. In the middle of 2020, we hired a bunch of fixed-term employees and gave them access to private, sensitive information about our customers, with no vetting or background checks of any kind. Boundless uses their "mission" to coerce employees into working overtime and accepting low salaries. They prey on young people by telling them they'll "make a difference" and then pay them very little for a ridiculous amount of work. It's completely unfair for some folks to earn $40k/year and have to work 60h/week, while the engineers get paid more than $130k/year to work a cool 30 hours. At the end of the day, the fact that Boundless's CEO would like nothing more than to work with DHS and ICE says all you need to know about the company's mission. Boundless is a young company that suffers from the inefficiencies of a major corporation. C-levels and VPs dictate implementation decisions, even though they are not individual contributors. Boundless has wasted a massive sum of money by forcing designers and engineers to submit to the whims of managers who had a "vision" for how things should work and forced impractical decisions. When engineers were given the freedom to work together and come up with solutions, the results were marvelous and morale went up, but those times were rare. Hiring decisions are extremely problematic. There were interview loops where the entire engineering team down-voted candidates, but when those candidates were white men or happened to have invested money in the company, the CTO decided to hire them anyway. As a direct result of this, every single software engineer that worked at Boundless in early 2020 has now left the company. The culture is deeply sexist. My female colleagues were called "non-collaborative" or "hard to work with" when they expressed important concerns. Women were only asked to attend the interviews of female candidates. Women were not given the recognition they deserved, even though their work was of higher quality than their male colleagues. Women were expected to perform an obscene amount of emotional labor, documentation, and "glue work." And through all that, the only times female engineers were promoted were after they gave their notice. When the engineering team pushed for diversity in the recruitment process, we were told that hiring diverse folks was the equivalent of "widening the goalposts". In other words, white men in charge of recruiting engineers are convinced that if you're not a white dude, you're automatically less competent. In February 2021, the company's leadership decided to lay off a bunch of employees. Some were terminated right away, while others were offered the "option" to relocate to Boundless's Las Vegas office. The catch: salaries would be cut by up to 36%, people would have to move to Nevada during an ongoing pandemic, and they would have to work in a physical office with documented Covid outbreaks. Meanwhile, the leadership team isn't taking any pay cuts, relocating, or facing any consequences.

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Boundless Immigration Response
5y
Thank you for taking the time to share your feedback. We regret that you did not have a great experience in your time at Boundless. As you mentioned in your review, we are fortunate to have passionate, empathetic, and driven employees who are committed to making the world a better place for immigrants. We do our best to create an autonomous environment where creative, talented employees can accelerate and grow their careers, and we are saddened to hear that this was not your experience. Several of the issues cited in your feedback are alarming to us, and are certainly not in line with our values or culture. As a company made up of more than 50% women and nearly 60% people of color, we do not tolerate sexism, racism, or harassment of any kind. This begins with the interview process and continues through hiring, onboarding, and every employee's experience working at Boundless. When serious issues do arise, our practice is to engage independent parties to investigate and to take immediate action based on their findings. As a company serving immigrants, with many of our employees being immigrants themselves, DEI is in our DNA. We believe that our teams can be most effective, and provide the best experience for every team member, if it is diverse in gender, race, cultural background, and work experience. And if every team member has a strong sense of inclusion and belonging and is provided with equitable opportunities for leadership, growth, and advancement. Our managers and leaders are responsible for ensuring that we build and run our teams accordingly and we hold each other accountable for living these values every day. As a rapidly growing startup keeping pace with all of the immigration changes amidst a global pandemic, we know we'll fall short in some areas as we grow. Despite our best efforts, we have made mistakes, we are learning from them, and we have added experienced leaders in our areas of highest growth – Engineering and Operations. Our software-development process has undergone a dramatic transformation over the past six months, driven by agile and scrum principles with developers and designers defining and organizing the work. Our operations process is likewise undergoing dramatic improvement, enabled by newly-developed software, that makes things easier and more efficient for both our customers and our operations staff. Your feedback is helpful as we look for ways to improve. Although you're no longer a part of Boundless, we'd love the chance to speak one-on-one to further explore your concerns and invite you to contact us directly. Thank you for being a part of this work for the time that you were here.
2.0
10 Sept 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

There were some very wonderful things about working at Boundless. The individual contributors are great. Most of my peers on the product team (engineering and design) were smart, engaged, extremely competent, and invested in asking the right questions and building the right product. We all cared deeply about the maintainability of our code base, and focused on ways we could make it better. While we often disagreed with each other about ways to do things, the team was very unified on big decisions, and had a good culture of talking through decisions to ultimately get buy-in. My manager, when he was able to just be an engineering manager, was excellent; he cared about my feedback and career progression. (Towards the end of my tenure at Boundless, he was forced to double up as a product manager, and that led to a deterioration of his efficacy, unfortunately.) I also had the pleasure of building internal tools, and therefore having to work closely with the customer success team. They are incredibly dedicated, hardworking people and excellent coworkers. The individual contributors are what make this company great; they are deeply invested in each other, the customers, and the culture of Boundless. I am very sad not to be working with these people anymore.

Cons

There were a lot of problems at Boundless, which ultimately for me ended up being too overwhelming to stay. In a lot of ways, I feel as though leadership (meaning much of the management team, although much of this criticism is directly on the CEO, despite my not having working much with him) pushed me out, which was really sad and disappointing. From my early days at Boundless, I was told that leadership wanted feedback and constructive criticism. At that point, only my manager had any experience in a leadership role, and it felt like they wanted to improve. There were instances where I gave them tough feedback, and initially it felt like they were listening. But eventually I learned they listened, but didn't seem to internalize or really hear the feedback. I was there for a little over two years, long enough to see recurring patterns in the way that leadership behaved, especially when it came to the treatment of non-product teams and how product decisions were bottle-necked. I started to see repercussions to the criticism I was giving, including accusations of being non-collaborative, a negative cultural influence, and of assuming bad intentions. These accusations felt very gendered (I’m a woman), especially in light of all the positive comments I was getting from individual teammates. The amount of emotional labor I was being asked to put into interactions was exhausting; I spent far too much time trying to cater to the comfort of people with much more power than me. Meanwhile, leadership was making the very same mistakes over and over again. (And also making new mistakes that would have been easy to avoid if they’d bothered to get input from the teams.) I watched people get more and more wary about trying to fix problems, as the repercussions got stiffer. I was given feedback that my "lack of trust" of leadership was a barrier to promotion; when I pointed out that leadership had done a number of untrustworthy things, that was waved off and I was told "leadership is not going to change." By the time I left, I would say Boundless had developed a culture of fear. Many employees were too nervous to speak out as working conditions worsened. Several people left without jobs lined up. (During the pandemic.) There were lots of many small incidents while I was there that led me to believe that leadership was not paying attention to individual contributors who were experts in different areas. The final straw for me happened because I felt that leadership was not take the data security of our customers seriously enough. While many startups play pretty fast and loose with security every company that I know of that deals with customer personal identifying information (PII) requires at the very least a background check on the employees that are going to be able to access that information. Trying to deal with a large backlog of customers in a short amount of time, Boundless leadership decided that that wasn’t necessary. As an engineer with some experience in cyber security, I pushed the engineering team to draw a line and insist on security restrictions. The response from leadership is unfathomable to me. They insisted on moving forward; I had to be in several very heated meetings in order to get the barest protections for our users. I understand the desire to move fast is baked in the startup model, but there are certain risks that are unacceptable. I wasn’t surprised that leadership hadn’t thought about the risks they were taking with our customers’ data; but their response in the face of my and the rest of the engineer team’s expertise was frankly distressing. I can’t be sure, as I was not invited into the higher-level meetings where decisions were made, but it felt like it stemmed from an inability to listen to feedback that didn’t validate their beliefs.

1.0
13 Aug 2020

Do NOT work here

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The only pros are the wealth of immigration knowledge you will gain and the quality of the people you will work with. The people who make up this company are incredible, driven, and passionate individuals; unfortunately management treats them all like garbage.

Cons

This company has shown time and time again that it does not care about its employees. The customer success teams are extremely overworked and underpaid. The workloads are so large, every individual works 10-20 hours of overtime every week, and still falls short of expectations. Management will continuously entice its employees with possible promotions only to force individuals to perform duties above their pay grade and deny any requests for compensation increases. They are only interested in getting the most bang for their buck. They want to get employees to do as much as they can for as little compensation as possible, even if that means they need to hire and train new employees every now and then. They would rather do this than pay people what they are worth. It is clear that this company does not value its employees at all.

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Glassdoor has 87 Boundless Immigration reviews submitted anonymously by Boundless Immigration employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Boundless Immigration is right for you.