divvyDOSE Reviews

3.2

54% would recommend to a friend

(120 total reviews)

Matt Combs

61% approve of CEO

55% positive business outlook

divvyDOSE has an employee rating of 3.2 out of 5 stars, based on 120 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The divvyDOSE employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Retail and wholesale industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

120 reviews
1.0
9 Sept 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

You’ll fall in love with most of your coworkers, the product, and the mission. Engineers get unlimited PTO and can work from home, which the rest of the company doesn’t get.

Cons

[HR, AKA “PEOPLE AND CULTURE”] The whole company except engineering and finance is based out of Moline. As a result, HR does not have a presence in the Chicago office or see what happens there. Not only was it difficult to reach out to HR when they weren’t around and hadn’t really built relationships with engineers, but it was known that conversations with HR would make their way to other members of leadership, without any anonymity. This led to many team members feeling uncomfortable and unsafe with HR, and a few women declined exit interviews. Engineers had been asking for anonymous feedback channels specifically around diversity/inclusion issues for a long time but those requests were laughed off repeatedly and didn’t exist until it was too late for most. Engineers also tried to create a diversity/inclusion committee in order to make the Chicago office safer and more inclusive, but HR said a committee “wasn’t necessary”, and per usual, did everything they could to control the narrative. [BENEFITS] The 401k doesn’t start until after 1 year, not even for your own contributions. You don’t get health insurance until a full month after you start, which is a bit silly since you’d think a healthcare company would prioritize their employees’ healthcare. And so much for “free” health insurance - of the three health plans, only the one with the highest deductible is free. [CULTURE] Attempts to communicate problems to senior leadership were dismissed with responses like "You must have misunderstood," “I don’t think he meant it like that,” or "I haven't noticed that." An “open-door policy” doesn’t mean much when you don’t take your employees seriously. [CTO] This person lacks empathy and the skills necessary to be a successful CTO and leader. The environment he creates is toxic and psychologically unsafe for people from marginalized identities. The women on the team experienced a lot of anxiety and fear regarding job security and were made to feel inadequate at their jobs. I saw this affecting the morale, mental health, and even physical health of my teammates. Examples: 1) Questioning women point-blank, “Do you believe you’re a good engineer?” and then invalidating their positive responses. 2) Reminding women that he watches all the pull requests, reads them every night, and therefore knows what everyone on the team does or doesn’t do. 3) Verbally negging/devaluing team members’ hard work in an apparent effort to get them to work longer/harder. 4) Making women feel guilty for pursuing hobbies or being involved in their communities rather than spending their off hours doing more work. Constantly reminding everyone that when he was an engineer, he was very absorbed in his work outside of work hours. 5) Literally referring to himself as a “10x engineer.” 6) Making employees feel uncomfortable by making comments about their financial choices and lifestyles by saying things like, “You can afford that. I pay you enough.” 7) Telling women who voiced feedback that they were complainers. Telling women who asked questions that they were “branding” themselves as incompetent workers. Making passive-aggressive jabs and doling out microaggressions to the point that it impacted women’s self-esteem and made them feel insecure about their technical abilities. 8) Using the fact that at one point the engineering team was 50% women to pad his ego and brag constantly. It started to feel like we were his trophies, and to be honest, it made me feel gross and tokenized. 9) Being informal, casual, and “joking” to the point of being inappropriate, i.e. referring to one of his direct reports as his “other wife” or his “work wife”, saying women can’t code, and telling an employee, “You’re awful at your job.” 10) Constantly demanding feedback and claiming it’s safe to give it (see: “open-door policy”) and then lashing out/exploding whenever he hears something he does not like. Manipulating people into feeling guilty by responding with things like, “I give you all of this, and this is the thanks I get?”, and “People are just ungrateful and always want more.” His volatility was widely known, and much of the managers’ jobs were just to figure out ways to communicate to him and package things in a way that wouldn’t trigger an extreme reaction. Managers carefully communicated to the CTO that his behavior was damaging the team and its culture. This resulted in some changes like discontinuing his 1:1s with engineers and removing him from some team meetings so that engineers could feel safer in those spaces. But he never apologized or acknowledged the harm he created or that he needed to change his behavior. The women on the team were told that it would be on them to move on, and avoid/ignore him as much as possible. For me, this was the worst part. It really showed that not only would the CTO not be held accountable for his actions, but also that the company truly did not care about its employees.

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divvyDOSE Response
6y
Thanks for taking the time to provide a review. I am thankful that you enjoyed your coworkers and were motivated by our mission. That means that we have hired good people and we are communicating that we are obsessively focused on fixing healthcare and improving the lives of the customers. Nothing about what we are doing is easy. We prioritize what we are working on based on a simple philosophy - is it positively impacting the customers we serve? We strive to make this a place where world class talent can come and are able to do their best work. It absolutely is not going to be a place where everyone thrives. We pride ourselves in hiring people from all sorts of backgrounds and who bring new perspectives. We can’t begin to change pharmacy if we aren’t bringing in diversity of thought and experience. That said, I completely agree that we need to ensure that we continue to work to have an environment and culture that embrace and support all employee perspectives. We provide a number of opportunities throughout the year to allow employees across the company to bring up concerns and provide anonymous feedback, including an anonymous feedback form and all-company instant communication tools that people can use anytime should they feel that there is urgency in delivering the message. I am thankful that your experience is not the experience that we hear from most. That said, we have to do better. There will always be ways to make this better. Thank you for the time you gave us and we wish you the best.
1.0
15 Aug 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

There are a lot of wonderful people on the team, and for a brief period, the engineering team was actually majority female. The benefits are also pretty good, though it can be awkward that they're much better for engineers than for the rest of the company. Engineers have unlimited PTO, a flexible schedule, and the ability to work from home whenever. Some team members work remotely full-time.

Cons

It’s no secret that the company is hemorrhaging engineers. The reason is simple: having an immature bully as your CTO makes for a very toxic work environment. He’s the kind of boss you tiptoe around because you never know when he will suddenly explode in the middle of a conversation that seemed completely benign. Middle managers spend a great deal of time and energy trying to handle him and keep him away from engineers, but they can only do so much. Some other examples of his behavior: (a) calling an Asian American employee a banana ("yellow on the outside, white on the inside"), and continuing to reference this "joke" for weeks afterward; (b) telling multiple people on the team that they should ask fewer questions to avoid seeming like they didn't know anything; and (c) micromanaging engineers to the point of demanding that one count the number of comments on her PRs and send him reports demonstrating that the comment total was decreasing over time. All of the employees in the above examples were women. And when diversity/inclusion concerns or initiatives are brought up to HR, they’re quick to tell you how passionate they are about inclusion in the same breath that they remind you that divvyDOSE is a startup with finite resources and *many* competing priorities. In one case, HR shared information directly with the CTO that had been shared by an employee who thought they were speaking in confidence. The adage that HR is not your friend could not be truer at this company.

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divvyDOSE Response
6y
Thanks for taking the time to provide a review. I can assure you that divvyDOSE takes any and all accusations seriously. We maintain high expectations about professional and personal conduct. We provide a number of opportunities throughout the year to allow employees across the company to bring up concerns and provide anonymous feedback. We also have an anonymous feedback form that people can use anytime. To date, we have not received any feedback that aligns with your observations (through our anonymous feedback/engagement survey, through direct managers, or from peers or other colleagues). I am happy to hear that you felt our benefits were good. We have worked very hard to provide free health insurance to our full-time employees. Our goal is to continue to work to create more rich benefits for our employees. We work hard to ensure that divvyDOSE is a diverse and inclusive place where all people are welcomed for their unique set of skills and abilities. Diversity and Inclusion mean so much more than any one thing. We will continue to do more, because we will never be at a place where we have done enough. We are all working to change healthcare in a deep and meaningful way. That work is hard and complex, but we enjoy that challenge and the results we see when we hear from those with chronic health issues about how transformative we have been for them. Thank you for your time at divvyDOSE and your efforts in helping us fix healthcare. We wish you the best in your future endeavors.
1.0
21 Aug 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great health insurance, competitive pay, flexible hours, unlimited WFH (although this wasn't documented, and some engineers were told they worked from home "too much").

Cons

I never felt like there were many opportunities to learn. Morale was very low due to engineers constantly hearing jabs about how they're "not getting enough done", how they're "never at their desks", and how "they can't make their sprint commitments." When a scrum master was brought in to help streamline sprint processes, leadership actively and loudly complained about the changes. Requests for anonymous feedback channels were turned down. Engineers were effectively expected to tell the CTO in person if they had problems with him, the company, or the culture. "D&I" was constantly touted as one of the number one priorities of leadership when it came to hiring and building an engineering culture, however we were never provided the actual ways leadership made D&I a priority. Team members were met with a lot of defensiveness when we tried to ask about concrete D&I efforts. Communication was difficult, and engineers often had issues feeling heard (Example: When an engineer asked how late they should expect to be logged on at night for their on call rotation, the conversation immediately steered toward "being a team player," with no actual clarification of on-call expectations.) I ended up leaving due to stress related health concerns that forced me to go to the doctor multiple times.

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divvyDOSE Response
6y
Thanks for taking the time to provide a review. We couldn’t agree more that we have incredibly talented employees across the company and endless amounts of really hard and challenging work to do. We do our best to drive with transparency (both during the interview process and post hire) that we have a huge task to accomplish that by no means would be described as easy. There isn’t a team in the company that hasn’t put in long hours to get the job done. Knowing that the hard work directly impacts the health of our customers is why employees tell us that they dig deep. We strive to make the company a great place to work for all people. Feedback is one of the ways in which we can do that. We provide a number of opportunities throughout the year to allow employees across the company to bring up concerns and provide anonymous feedback, including an anonymous feedback form and all-company instant communication tools that people can use anytime should they feel that there is urgency in delivering the message. We wish you all the best.
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Glassdoor has 125 divvyDOSE reviews submitted anonymously by divvyDOSE employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if divvyDOSE is right for you.