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Trinity Life Sciences

Engaged Employer

Trinity Life Sciences reviews

3.3

59% would recommend to a friend

(509 total reviews)
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Scott Evangelista

100% approve of CEO

49% positive business outlook

Trinity Life Sciences has an employee rating of 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 509 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Trinity Life Sciences employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Management & Consulting industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

509 reviews
2.0
Jun 9, 2018

Great people, uninspired work

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Great coworkers who are hard-working, talented, and easy-going - Good option if you're interested in market research - IT and HR staff are great

Cons

- Echoing previous reviews here when saying that Trinity is a market research firm, contrary to what they would like you to believe in interviews. Little to none of the work is "strategic" in nature ... even for strategy consultants who were hired for the role. A typical Trinity project involves interviewing physicians/payers or conducting a survey and summarizing findings to clients. If you're looking to get into healthcare-focused management consulting, look elsewhere. You'll spend most of your time drafting interview guides or putting together a large volume of low quality slides together - Recently partnered with Parthenon, a growth equity firm - many employees are blinded by the realities of partnering with growth equity shops. A simple google search will show the ugly path taken to get to an exit - Clients know that Trinity is a decidedly mid-tier consulting firm and treats project teams as such. If you're looking for real management consulting experience, go to ClearView, LEK, Putnam, or other firms that have a stronger presence in strategic advisory - Multi-staffing system: if you enjoy feeling that you're spread thing across multiple projects, this might work for you. Leads to poor quality, often recycled, work being delivered to clients. Burnout is common since you're forced to work on multiple project and are unable to commit 100% of your time and energy to the given task at hand - General structure: given that Trinity's primary value add is from its market research/analytics arms, the fact that >50% of its staff is in general consulting means that if you're hired as a strategy consultant, you'll spend around 75% of your time on tasks that should be handled by the understaffed research & analytics verticals. Firm is top heavy, with too many inexperienced managers and not enough junior staff to execute on the projects promised to clients - Benefits: comp and other benefits are below market. Healthcare plan is awful, with high employee contribution expected. Vacation time is often not respected and certain managers expect you to be available on email when you are out of office on vacation - Trinity is not willing to invest in the resources needed at a healthcare consulting firm, from access to standard academic literature, data sets, etc. Get comfortable with Google searching or finding workarounds to get access to even the most basic information - Most of the work is boilerplate with little customization for a given project. Repeat clients will soon realize that the work outside of the interviews and surveys is largely recycled and go elsewhere

1.0
Feb 9, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

1. Decent recognition from industry making the transition pretty easy. Honestly, take what you can learn from here and get into industry ASAP 2. Staff level people were very collaborative, smart, and hardworking. It just pains me to see how some of them are mistreated by MT and LT and those that don't 'fit in' are unfortunately axed and reprimanded for their job

Cons

I intentionally held off writing this review to give myself some headspace after leaving the company. Needless to say, my experience is mostly focused on working in Trinity's NY office 1. Most LT/MT have favorites and there is a culture of perfectionism. If your suggestions aren't aligned with MT/LT, and/or make mistakes and are disliked by an old timer, you will not get promoted. MT will see any challenges to their authority as 'uncooperativeness' or 'unreceptive to feedback.' This unfortunately creates a culture where staff member's have to hold back their input to any project work and discourages collaboration. 2. Staffing is incredibly inconsistent within and across pods. You will have teammates who are swimming in free time/on the bench for weeks, constantly pinging that they have ST time, vs other teammates are swamped and can't catch a breath. There is no camaraderie as Partners will be incredibly resistant to put their own pod members for cross pod staffing as they are too concerned about their own P&L. Timesheets apparently don't mean anything even if you're clocking 60-70 hour work weeks and still get staffed on projects, while other teammates who have bandwidth and put themselves available for project work are just simply ignored and left on the bench. 3. I found in general MT/LT are incredibly resistant and unreceptive to feedback. Feedback in the NY office goes heavily top down, whilst feedback from project members to MT/LT are simply ignored or not taken into consideration. Whenever something goes wrong with a project, MT/LT places blame on staff members without truly reflecting on their own contributions (or lack of) to the project. What's the whole point of having '360 reviews' if in the end all the blame ends up with the staff? 4. Work at Trinity is honestly very misleading and not 'strategic' at all. You will be doing mostly primary/secondary market research (~80% your work) vs true strategy projects. Don't expect to learn any forecasting, valuation, transaction, BD type work, as MT will play favorites and disregard your staffing considerations for the tiny amount of these projects that they sell. There is a project passport for you to develop holistically but I feel like that never really gets followed as I've heard instances where staff members are constantly getting staffed on repetitive PMR engagements. 5. Learning is not at all valued at the company as you are expected to perform at certain standards, but the company does not invest in any real training to their team members and you just have to learn by drinking down a hose of water. (e.g., don't staff people on forecasting projects if they haven't had the experience to build a model from scratch by themselves, don't expect a staff member to lead a PMR project if they never written a DG or conducted a KOL interview before) 6. Performance review are a complete joke. I've seen/heard MT nitpick bad reviews to only show to staff members, while the truth could be far from it (other reviews that praised their contributions were simply ignored). It honestly boils down MT playing favorites and if you fall within this mold, you will be rewarded and if not you will be forced to look for other opportunities. 7. Gossip culture is real in the Wall street office. I've heard countless examples of MT/LT gossip about staff members who would unknowingly hear through the grapevine from eavesdropping or other team members. This creates a very toxic culture for a lot of junior folks to be in, and it saddens me to see great team members getting debased by senior folks of the firm. I know its human nature to gossip, but please keep it to yourselves... 8. Scheduled/approved time off is not respected by managers, literally all 24 hours of every day are expected to be made available to work, rotating project teams mean no manager feels a responsibility to help you develop. If people are still working 12 hour work days while they are OOO, what's the whole point of being OOO? This needs to change as this culture of not disconnecting while OOO creates a fear for junior folks to do the same, adding more to this toxic pressure cooker culture 9. General woes associated with consulting - 60+ hour work weeks are the norm, always have an unbalanced power dynamic between client/vendor, artificial/unrealistic timelines are constantly created without consideration to staff bandwidth in order to stroke a client's ego. I went in knowing this won't be an easy job, but the above few points really make don't make it at all a collaborative, learning-focused, and sustainable work environment to envision a long term career here.

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Trinity Life Sciences Response
3y
Thanks for taking the time to provide feedback. At Trinity, we are committed to living by our values; one of which is ‘every voice matters’. Know we have heard your feedback and are sorry to read that your experience was so challenging. Our collaborative and collegial culture has been a source of pride for us for more than 25 years. While working in consulting certainly comes with it a fast-pace and high-standards, we strive to ensure all junior staff have mentors, on the job training and peer support. I will bring this to our team in NY, so we can consider areas of improvement. We wish you all the best in your next career chapter. - Maia
1.0
Apr 8, 2025

Toxic and getting worse

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Benefits are decent, summer Fridays. Some nice people along the way.

Cons

Trinity used to be a good place, but in the last 3-4 years it’s really gone down hill. The CPO really tanked the culture and its systemic throughout the organization. HR is a joke and so unprofessional. The amount of people in leadership positions that have only worked at Trinity is laughable. They have no perspective on how to run an organization. As a consultant, we are overworked and underpaid. I recommend going to Clearview or Dedham. Better leaders, better teams, better growth. Oh, also don’t forget to get screwed on your bonus.

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Trinity Life Sciences Response
1y
We appreciate you sharing your feedback. I see that you have been with Trinity for over 5 years, and it's concerning to hear that your experience has not been positive in the past few years. We take feedback regarding our culture, HR, and leadership seriously – your insights are crucial for us to understand where we need to improve. We would appreciate you sharing more details about your experiences so we can use them as a catalyst for positive change. The best way to do so would be to go to your manager or HR Business Partner directly, or if you're more comfortable, sharing through the NAVEX portal. We understand your frustrations and are committed to addressing them!
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