A Sinking Ship with No Real Leadership or Incentives Left - Anonymous employee Tendo Employee Review

1.0
7 July 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- A few brilliant product managers & engineers still trying their best. - Fully remote, flexible PTO

Cons

Leadership Lacks Critical Domain Expertise — And It Shows: In a health tech company, every person in executive leadership should, at a minimum, possess both strong technical and clinical experience. If someone only has one or the other, they’re simply not equipped to offer meaningful insight. - If it’s just a clinician who doesn’t understand how modern software is built or scaled, they’re left handwaving and offering shallow suggestions that don’t translate into usable product. - If it’s someone technical without deep healthcare understanding, they’ll build products that seem sound on paper but completely miss real-world usage complexities in healthcare. Without both domains represented in each individual leader, the company is stuck spinning its wheels—shipping misaligned features, misunderstanding customer feedback, and walking into avoidable pitfalls. The refusal to set the standard for cross-domain expertise has been one of the company’s biggest downfalls. It’s been years of watching this happen—and nothing has changed. Raises That Don’t Beat Inflation: A 2% raise is not a reward. It’s a message. When inflation is higher and the cost of living climbs, calling that a “merit increase” is almost insulting. A company that claims to be a “family” should treat its people better. At the very least, meet the market. Instead, top performers are demotivated and disengaged. Broken Bonus Promises: Year after year, leadership promises that bonuses will be decoupled from company performance, and tied to individual contributions, or they'll figure something out that works for everyone. But when the time comes, the bonus program is quietly scrapped or deprioritized—always with some version of “given the circumstances…” And employees are told to just be grateful for their 2%. Turns out leadership is just figuring out something that works out best for them. Equity That Carries No Weight: Equity refreshes are handed out, but in a company with no growth trajectory, unclear exit strategy, and high attrition, they’re effectively worthless. They certainly don’t replace competitive cash compensation. AI Hype With No Strategy: Leadership suddenly pivoted to AI without the technical expertise or foundational infrastructure to back it up. It’s just surface-level talk—more buzzwords than strategy. Recent Product Sale – No Transparency, No Profit Sharing: Leadership made a big internal push to close a recent product sale, rallying many employees to support it. This was one of Tendo's initial products that was eventually scrapped due to poor market uptake. Leadership somehow sold the rights of this product to another company, but once it went through, there was zero transparency: no information on how much it sold for, how it would impact the business, or how all the employees who worked hard to help make it happen would benefit. There was no bonus, no recognition, no shared upside. To make matters worse, several Tendo employees were cherry-picked and forced to join the acquiring company. So much for being a “family.” Culture is Broken — and Leadership Still Doesn’t Get It: Many employees still at the company are dejected and already planning to leave. You can feel the energy drop across the board.

Explore other reviews about Tendo

5.0
12 Aug 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Provides breathe days. Friendly team

Cons

Mostly remote so if you like working in the office, this may be con for you. But for most, its a pro.

2.0
8 Oct 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Coworkers - Every coworker I came across had been helpful, friendly, and respectful. This was a bright spot for the company and was something I hadn't seen diminish during my time. Folks were respectful of everyone's time and did their best to not disturb others that are outside of the normal allotted work hours (this is a remote company with people on both coasts). PTO/Breathe - Like other recent reviews have mentioned, PTO and vacation are respected and time off had always been approved in my case. The breathe program is a nice perk where employees could reimburse up to $1500/yr to spend on themselves. Tech - Not sure if this is still the case, but the core tech stack was modern and provided learning opportunities. I am hesitant to put this in the Pros section because, depending on which team you are hired into, you may be working on the acquired legacy product that was far from modern and sleek. Remote - No pushes for RTO.

Cons

Vision - The company seemed lost, both in terms of product vision and execution. After nixing a majority of the core application features and selling them off (no transparency of the sale), the direction was all over the place. AI features being thrown at the wall to see what sticks, POCs with no weight. The company was lost. Tech - If you are an engineer, proceed with caution during the interview process. Make sure you know which team you are interviewing for and what you will be working on. There were different halves to the company - the original platform side which was working on modern languages and modern tooling, and the company that was acquired that was working on outdated languages and legacy technology. Make sure you are interviewing for the right team for you. Compensation - Low. Salaries did not keep up with inflation and are not at market rates. Like other reviews mentioned - 2% was a slap in the face when living costs are rising rapidly. Company bonuses were never paid out during my time because company goals were never met. Equity didn't meet expectations. Culture - Motivation was sharply declining. Engineering attrition was massive. There was a vibrant engineering culture of demoing work, knowledge sharing, and building cool things together but that effectively disappeared around 2024. Even small things like engagement in slack and meetings were dwindling noticeably.

3
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