Naive and toxic - Operations Executive Beam (UK) Employee Review

1.0
17 Oct 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Beam has attracted exceptional talent, which has been a major factor in retaining employees. The company's mission is impactful, but it sometimes feels like we are falling short due to rapid growth

Cons

Attributing issues to 'natural scaling problems' is a deflective statement that avoids taking responsibility for significant concerns. The departure of nearly twenty employees this year speaks volumes, and I'm now considering my departure as well. While the company has been transparent about addressing cultural issues, a change in leadership is essential for lasting and effective change. They seem to take advantage of the inexperience of young, recently graduated staff who may not fully grasp what constitutes an ideal workplace. This isn't a critique of the younger staff, but rather an observation of Beam's practices. Beam has cultivated a peculiar culture marked by contradictions: Employees are rapidly promoted, primarily based on their unwavering 'Beam-y-ness,' while talented colleagues from more diverse backgrounds struggle to advance, and when they do, it's at a much slower rate than their white counterparts. The company places a strong emphasis on revenue while justifying lower pay due to its social mission. Although they offer attractive benefits, they often come with conditions. For instance, they claim to provide unlimited holidays but set guidance for just 25 days. They also offer free therapy, but it seems mainly geared towards addressing workplace-manager-induced stress. While the company emphasizes compassion in its dealings with members, the same treatment does not always extend to staff. It's worth noting that there have been requests for employees over the last weeks to write five-star reviews to counterbalance negative feedback.

Explore other reviews about Beam (UK)

2.0
19 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- the general workforce (outside of leadership) are amazing, genuine, kind and skilled people. I loved coming to work and felt motivated to work hard in the interest of my colleagues. I’ve also made and retained friends at Beam and many others would say the same - really well organised company events including summer parties, Christmas etc - good tech - 3 days wfh and the ability to work remotely globally. they say you can work flexible hours and can work the hours of the remote location but in reality it’s a very fixed 9-6 UK time environment. you are looked down on if you’re seen to leave before (or at!) 6 but my guess is there’s a fair amount of performative working - you can have a pretty solid work life balance if you block out the performative work culture. it’s simultaneously a micro manage and hands off management approach, where as long as you’re visible on slack people will think you’re working hard. Put slack on your phone and go to the park!

Cons

- complete lack of company strategy at all levels makes it impossible to know what the focus is both short and long term. In the 2 years I was there, the mission changed at least quarterly - unable to retain staff. in early 2026 the retention rate for staff was less than 50% which means 1 in 2 staff would leave before they made it 12 months. I lasted 2 years and was considered an old hand. - sales targets are deliberately set to be un achievable, and leadership will openly say that they are stretch targets whilst penalising people for not meeting them. For a sales person, doing well at Beam means hitting 60% of your target - this doesn’t translate in the wider sales sector. Furthermore, if you hit your target - rather than celebrating, leadership will raise it as it was “too easy” - sales people regularly let go with no warning and no prior performance management. This is never communicated within the business, they are just deactivated on slack and disappear overnight - although this is somewhat normal in all companies - leadership have clear favourites who are overwhelmingly promoted, celebrated and remunerated above and beyond others. in general these are oxbridge grads. rumours are that only oxbridge grads are hired into leadership roles. - three SLT members and head of HR have no people skills and actively bully members of staff. COO renowned for making employees cry in meetings. Head of HR has no HR experience - pay disparity and lack of general company transparency - bi-annual engagement survey has no follow up. The last one I saw in early 2026 had terrible engagement scores and was literally not spoken about at any point by anyone in leadership. No accountability, engagement surveys are completely performative - benefits are being eroded over time but openly advertised roles reflect old benefits structure - highly performative, slack visibility based culture that rewards woo woo and criticises realism. To succeed you either have to be fully on board with leadership or come from a company that they respect (eg Palantir) There are so many more bad things to say about this company. My guess is that long term this company won’t succeed, which is truly a shame because they hire wonderful, competent people. I’ll be interested to see what happens for them - if I was on the board or a shareholder I’d be asking questions

4
5.0
31 Mar 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- great pace of work (fast but satisfying) - energising culture, the people always challenge you in great ways - high performance is rewarded - leadership has become highly responsive to feedback

Cons

- quite rightly we’re very against spending a long time to think about things ( definitely a bias for figuring things out as we go) sometimes we could spend a little longer thinking!

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