Very uncomfortable environment - Anonymous employee FindLaw Employee Review

3.0
Jul 12, 2016
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The hours are flexible, and no real pressure to be there at a curtain time. The pay seemed to be a bit above average. Great vacation and PTO time - if you start January 1, you automatically will get close to six weeks paid holidays, PTO and sick days off our first year.

Cons

There main hub in Eagan Minnesota has over 6000 employees so there is a huge feeling of only being a number. The department I worked in was called FindLaw, they marketed to lawyers and was run and managed by a younger insecure group. Very insecure team that was not interested in hearing your idea's because they didn't think of it - you know what I mean? Super super quiet environment, no one talked, no one made phone calls, it was do quiet that you could hear yourself chew - you wouldn't dare bite into an apple, everyone would hear you - it's just a very uncomfortable environment. No real training, more like figure it out on your own. In general, most people don't say good morning or say good night - it was weird, no one really asked anything about you. I think they were so self conscience and uncomfortable about being friendly or afraid they might get in trouble for something. NO FUN, period!

Explore other reviews about FindLaw

5.0
Mar 2, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great team, supportive manager, no micromanaging

Cons

I don't have any cons to list.

1.0
May 14, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Smart, talented and helpful colleagues. There is also a keen desire to keep improving the product and to implement new tools, such as AI, in a responsible manner.

Cons

By far, the biggest disappointment is the greed-fueled mission of Internet Brands' private equity owners to maximize profits as quickly as possible by reducing U.S. payroll and benefits. Since buying FindLaw from Thomson Reuters in late 2024, Internet Brands has steadily hired workers in Mexico and the Philippines and proportionately cut U.S.-based staffing to take advantage of lower labor costs. New hires in those two countries have remained steady despite stagnant to declining sales. Team members with more than 20 years of experience (who received the highest compensation) were among the first to be let go, even before the sale closed, as U.S. layoffs have become routine in nearly every quarter since. These were people who helped build FindLaw into a leading legal marketing company. I will give them credit for not hiding who they are. From the beginning, during the first Teams meeting in late 2024, the CEO's first words to nearly 1,000 FindLaw employees were that IB's only mission is to "make money." It was jarring for everyone to go from a company like Thomson Reuters, which valued its employees and had a progressive workplace culture, to the new owners' unbridled, unapologetic greed.

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