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Boundless Spatial

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Boundless Spatial Reviews

3.1

42% would recommend to a friend

(15 total reviews)

Andrew Dearing

41% approve of CEO

29% positive business outlook

Boundless Spatial has an employee rating of 3.1 out of 5 stars, based on 15 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Boundless Spatial employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

15 reviews
1.0
Nov 1, 2017

Worst 6 Months of My Professional Career

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Nothing significant comes to mind. I mean, I guess they got me a nice laptop to use, but I mostly award Apple with that achievement.

Cons

I wish I had never accepted this job. It is, hands down, the worst company I have ever worked for, and the worst leadership I have ever experienced. During my time there, I felt as though: There was a complete lack of culture: Most employees are independent/remote, with time zones spanning the globe. There were never team phone calls with the whole staff to make sure we were all on the same page. The platform they provided was a Slack channel that usually represented a chaotic puddle of questions, assumptions, and half pieces of information strung together by whomever happened to be awake and "on the clock." Poor Communication: I saw this expressed again and again from staff; I can not count how many times I saw an employee exclaim that they didn't know how to do something as basic as filling out their timecard because they (A) were not clear on what project they were working on, and (B) didn't even know who they should be reporting to to *ask* what project they were supposed to be working on. Poor Leadership: It was abundantly clear very early on that my supervisor was unskilled in managing people and had terrible communication skills. I did not feel a sense of camaraderie, teamwork, or a supportive environment in my time there. There were even times where she was flat out rude to me. EXAMPLE 1: On my first day of training with my supervisor she explained how she actually did not like managing other people, and that she preferred to work alone. Why someone would tell this this to their subordinate on their first day makes no sense to me. Later on she explained how she did not have a good history of interpersonal relationships in the workplace. All of this proved to be correct; I often experienced her as awkward, rude, distant, cold, and unsupportive. EXAMPLE 2: The company allowed employees to be reimbursed for expenses incurred on days they had to work in an office as opposed to their home (they called them "work from work" days). Initially this sounded great to me, until I realized that for some reason I was NOT being allowed to claim these same expenses (when other employees, including my supervisor, were). I had to go into an office for the better part of my first two months, and when I asked my supervisor whether or not my expenses for these days were reimbursable, she said that no, they weren't. Once I had been there for three and a half months (two of those months were almost daily in-office days) she allowed me to start claiming these expenses (not retroactively mind you, only from that point moving forward) like everyone else was. When she told me that I was finally able to claim these expenses, I said thank you and that I really appreciated the gesture. She replied with, "LOL - sounds like you could be doing a better job of taking better care of your personal finances." Not only was this comment rude, unnecessary, and completely inappropriate, it left me feeling uncomfortable about the fairness and supervision Boundless was displaying of its employees by upper management. I was left asking myself, "why am I allowed to be treated like this?" "What have I done to deserve this level of unfairness, inconsistency, and rudeness?" EXAMPLE 3: I was told that I should get whatever equipment or furniture I needed for my home office, and that I would be reimbursed. I notified my supervisor that I needed a new computer chair, and asked her how much I could spend (there was nothing published by the company about a price range for these kinds of charges). She replied in person that I could spend a few hundred bucks on it - so I did. Then when I submitted my expense report, she rejected/denied it, balking at the cost claiming it was much more than we had discussed (I spent less that $300.00). This situation showed me that 1) apparently I needed to get everything in writing and 2) the communication and consistency at the company was poor. In the end, I was never reimbursed, and was stuck with the cost of an office chair I was told to buy, all the while hearing about other employees being reimbursed for much larger ticket items. I was left feeling like I was not being treated the same way other employees were. The way in which I was fired was terrible, and IMO symptomatic of what it meant to be an employee at Boundless. Two weeks before it went down: I had what would be my only 1-1 with the CFO. We discussed what direction I wanted to move within the company, what skills I wanted to focus on improving, and a general check in. At the end of that 1-1 I asked him if he had any feedback about my performance and he said, "Not really, we definitely DONT feel like we needed one thing and got another with you." What a set-up. Fast forward two weeks: It's hours before I go on a three day vacation, with no warning or disciplinary period leading up to it. I was let go during what was explained to me as a phone meeting to finally "go over those goals you set" with my supervisor and the CFO. These were goals I had set almost three months prior, goals my supervisor had barely mentioned to me since I set them. I was naively excited, hoping the CFO was becoming more involved in my career development there. I felt completely mislead by the whole thing; it felt very unfair, and extremely unprofessional. Cherry on top of the disaster sundae? I received a sweatshirt with their logo on it at my home the next day. My supervisor had even IMed me the day before saying she was excited for me to receive it, apparently all the while planning my departure. As I type this, I realize there are so many stories I could tell. These are just the ones that show up for me as the most *important* to tell. When I think about the ways I was disrespected on a personal, financial, and professional level, it makes me sick to my stomach. I wish I had NEVER accepted this job. The frustration, hurt, and confusion I was left with outweighed any sort of benefit I may have experienced.

1.0
Sep 2, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Gained lots of experience in a short amount of time with skills that I would not have sought out on my own.

Cons

There are terrible issues with turn over at Boundless. I left a very stable government environment to accept a job with Boundless that only lasted two months. I should have recognized the fact that everyone who I talked to at the company had not been there for even a full year - except for those on the board. A woman I interviewed with had not even been there for a month and she was interviewing me - not a good sign. But they made me an offer that was a significant increase in salary and promised that the first 6 months would be training so I accepted. On my first day of work, my supervisor (who also recruited me on linked in) revealed to me that he had not even looked at my resume! I should have gotten out right away at that point but I have this terrible no-quit attitude so I stuck it out. Weeks later, I was in a grueling schedule of learning hard core back-end programming and I am a designer who does mostly front-end work so clearly I was struggling. Even though it was challenging work and I was struggling, I thought that at least I was learning a lot and recalled that the first 6 months was training so it was okay that I was struggling. Obviously, if they wanted me to do work I would easily excel at, they would give me tasks that were in languages that I already knew - programming languages that were listed on my resume. At one of the meetings, it was announced that there is a $2,000 bonus for anyone who recommends someone who is eventually hired on so, now I'm thinking that this guy recruited me for completely selfish gain. The tasks I was given had no direction and no real picture of a final product. I was putting in 60-80 hours a week with no idea what the finished product was supposed to look like or do. Not only that, but I would complete tasks and when I handed them in, my supervisor would deem them inadequate and re-assign them to me. So, I would be working on the same small "agile" task for weeks. The day I was fired, I didn't see it coming at all. My supervisor even told me that the next week we would start some tasks that were part of my skill set. There was no warning or discipline period. In addition to all that, there are serious problems with minorities and women in the company. There were only two female programmers in my department and the other was the woman who interviewed me and had only been there for a month. As far as minorities go? I was the only latino person-period. Black people? Non-existent. There was one Indian guy (as in from India). All the people on the board are white young men. It goes without saying that there are some serious discrimination issues. My supervisor would regularly make comments during our daily scrums that were overtly sexist. On one occasion, he made a "joke" about me and the other man on my team hooking up.

1.0
Sep 5, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

St. Louis is fun city; Boundless not so fun.

Cons

Product strategy is terrible, senior leadership are by no means 'senior' as they were simply forced into position.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 15 Reviews

Glassdoor has 16 Boundless Spatial reviews submitted anonymously by Boundless Spatial employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Boundless Spatial is right for you.