Poor leadership, blatant nepotism and discrimination - Anonymous employee Lumistry Employee Review

1.0
Mar 13, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-Remote work flexibility -Used to have a great culture and mission -Amazing people before they all got fired

Cons

Lumistry used to be a great company to work for. It had amazing people, offered a great culture, great benefits, and had a great mission. Unfortunately all of this changed once the new CEO Tim started. Longstanding employees were fired, and all of the female employees that were fired were replaced with men. There are no more female executives. Almost every new hire has been a nepotism hire. Insurance rates were doubled. Institutional knowledge has been gutted, morale has plummeted, and the culture has completely deteriorated. Decisions feel short-term and designed to only benefit the executives and their friends. Lack of transparency has fueled distrust across the organization. I'm genuinely saddened by what this company has become - a sinking ship. I would encourage anyone who has been discriminated against or mistreated by this company to file a complaint with the EEOC.

Explore other reviews about Lumistry

5.0
Jun 11, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Lumistry has made meaningful progress over the last several months. Leadership is actively working to break down silos, improve cross-functional collaboration, and create better alignment across teams. There is a noticeable sense of momentum in the business, with new products, partnerships, and initiatives creating optimism about the future.

Cons

there is a lot happening at once. Priorities continue to evolve as the business scales, which can create competing demands on teams. Continued focus on prioritization and communication

1.0
Jun 4, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The people. Some really great people work there still and used to work there.

Cons

Burnout is everywhere. Priorities constantly change, expectations are unclear, and people are expected to just figure it out. Deadlines are missed because teams are pulled in too many directions at once. Layoffs and restructures happen so often that uncertainty becomes part of the job. Decisions feel rushed, communication is poor, and every new change seems to create more work and more stress. Benefits have steadily gotten worse while workloads continue to increase, and meaningful raises are hard to come by despite taking on more responsibility. Leadership says a lot of good things, but it's hard to take those messages seriously when people are constantly stretched thin, burned out, and worried about what's coming next.

4
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