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Thermo Fisher Scientific

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Silent Layoffs and Poor Upper Management - Anonymous employee Thermo Fisher Scientific Employee Review

2.0
Nov 30, 2022
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

1. Thermo has a great reputation to the external world, so this is the place to be if you want a resume booster. 2. You're helping a great cause (healthcare industry). 3. My team is amazing.

Cons

1. If you want to join a company that is currently undergoing massive silent layoffs, and completely diminishing their integrity, then this is the place for you. 2. Zero transparency within this overall culture, especially from Sr Leaders. 3. Just to name a few sectors getting laid off across the globe in masses: Operations, R&D, and Talent Acquisition. The only group that has been reported to the public is Grand Island, NY. I'm not sure how this organization is getting away with it. 4. They preach about process improvement, but the processes and systems are completely dated and old school that it's shocking. This comes from all different parts of the business. Simple processes and systems takes months, if not years, to implement. 5. Toxicity - The culture needs a massive overhaul. It's very cutthroat. People are always angry and looking for other jobs. Turnover is high for the industry.

Explore other reviews about Thermo Fisher Scientific

5.0
May 23, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good company to work with. Provides good benefits. A growing company with a strong-solid background in the medical field.

Cons

Mainly a medical company (95%), but has invested in other areas (5%). If you are in the 5% area, it's difficult to transfer, even once you are internally an employee there.

2.0
May 26, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You'll get hands-on experience with regulated lab environments, which is genuinely valuable early in your career. The CRO world gives you transferable knowledge of clinical trial operations that other companies will recognize. If you're self-motivated, there's room to build things on your own. I taught myself new tools and built reporting dashboards for my department because nobody else was going to do it. Tuition reimbursement existed when I started, which was a real benefit.

Cons

Compensation does not match the workload. You will be overworked and underpaid, and when you bring it up, nothing changes. I repeatedly asked leadership to let me take on work that aligned with my career goals and education, but I was always "too busy" with my regular responsibilities for that to happen. They'll happily benefit from your output but won't invest in your growth. The tuition reimbursement policy changed while I was mid-degree, which tells you everything about how they view employee development. Benefits are underwhelming for a company this size, and when I needed them most, they fell short. A workplace injury made it very clear where employees fall on their priority list, and it's well below the bottom line.

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