15 Jun 2023
Brave Response
2yWe are genuinely sorry if this was your experience at Brave. We strive to create a welcoming, fair culture for all employees, with merit-based rewards that focus solely on a person’s work. Our C-Suite, Board, and HR teams have worked hard to combat unconscious bias, via specific DEI training and certifications for all managers. The personal political beliefs of any Brave leader are “left at the door,” and expressly do NOT influence hiring, reviews, or promotions. We also have processes in place to address discrimination, harassment, and any other employee concern, and to do so promptly and anonymously.
We’ve searched our (confidential) HR records, and found no situations that match the description you’ve given above. If you—or someone you know—has experienced something that diverges from the north star we’ve described above, we encourage you to contact Brave HR, your supervisor, or any other people manager. We can assure you that we take people matters seriously, and will act promptly and decisively to address any concern.
Brave is a small and scrappy team; we know that Brave would not exist without the people who bring it to life. All employees matter to us as makers, and as human beings. This is part of what makes Brave such a wonderful place to work: we’re small enough that everyone knows everyone else’s name, and respects everyone else’s differing—but complementary—abilities, ideas, and perspectives.
While we have a variety of leaders at every level of varying race, nationality, gender, LGBTQ+, disability, and neurodiversity status and identification, we know the important work of DEI is never “done.” It’s this very cultural mindset that ensures we never stop improving.