Some Great Experiences, but Glad I am Out! - Anonymous employee Common Sense Media Employee Review

1.0
23 Mar 2016
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
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Pros

Looks great on a resume. I worked with many hardworking, talented and smart individuals. I made many good friends.

Cons

You can have the opportunity to work on some great projects, but often the launch is poorly planned, funded, supported or there are millions of changes and/or priorities change from the President or other C staff at the last minute. This could be in any department of the company. The organization tries to do too many things at the same time and often unfortunately the end result is mediocre or could have been at a much higher level. CSM has so much potential and could have much more impact if this could be corrected. It doesn't appear that the C staff are all in agreement on strategy and at times it doesn't seem like they even like each other. The C staff and HR do not appear very transparent. Turnover is high and people tend to disappear without a reason or something plausible. Remember that you have hired really talented and intelligent people. Be honest with your employees and they will respect you much more. The Directors that report to the President openly complain about her, her demands, how she causes inefficiencies..... She isn't inspiring and doesn't appear to be a visionary. I am very glad to not have to attend another of the staff meetings. Raises don't keep up with inflation and are generally 3% no matter how you perform. Some individuals work extremely hard and others just seem to coast without repercussions. Morale is not good, everyone seems stressed out and on top of that the office is overly crowded. The location is not great and management should pay 100% of parking to compete.

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5.0
24 Jun 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

A nonprofit that is adopting new technology to scale their progress against the major issues their family/teacher constituency is facing. Incredible mission -- super relevant in an age when technology and media are speeding up around our kids. Kind and thoughtful management and openness to thinking through new approaches to old challenges.

Cons

Occasionally, consensus-driven culture can slow down decision-making (but that is not always a bad thing!)

1.0
22 Aug 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I've struggled for a nearly year to find the right words to write this review. I worked for Common Sense Media for over a decade. I saw it at its best and at its worst. Back around 2015, there was a strong spirit of collegiality and collaboration. The org president would sign off emails with "better together" (one of the org values) and it really felt like everyone was working together without ego to create high quality content. Throughout my full time at Common Sense, my coworkers were passionate, vibrant, engaged, and a delight to work with. The digital citizenship curriculum appears to do good in the world, training kids to be safe, ethical, and responsible online. (The media reviews are a more mixed-bag and may be used by conservative groups to actively ban books and promote censorship, particularly of LGBTQ+ people.)

Cons

The senior leadership has contributed to a much more negative culture over time. There were somewhere on the order of 5 rounds of "layoffs" that I'm aware of, and in many cases, leadership hired new people to fill essentially the same roles shortly later. In some cases, the people who were laid off were high performers whose business functions were determined to be no longer necessary, but then after they were gone, their responsibilities still had to be done, and new roles re-establishing the same business functions opened up half a year later. In other cases, the management used "layoffs" to get rid of people who disagreed with them and rehired for essentially the same roles nearly immediately. This management approach gave myself and many of my coworkers a deep fear that we might randomly lose our jobs if we approached leadership with any data that contradicted their preconceived notions. Senior leadership would often mention a tight budget, but they did not appear to think this applies to themselves. Historically, Common Sense has given a cost of living increase of 3% per year to its employees. In 2021, employees were told that no one received salary increases because of a tight financial year, but the org's Form 990s (publicly available a few years later) indicate that senior leadership did still give themselves salary increases, averaging 4.8%. Ashwin Sridhar, the current CTO/CPO, contributes to a particular culture of toxicity. He decided when first joining and before seeing any data that the way to grow membership was to build a parenting advice chatbot app. He consistently ignored data indicating that this would not work. But far worse, he intentionally siloed data, mandating that anything that contradicted his vision not be shared with other senior leaders. He has promoted the idea to stakeholders that he is bringing a new data-focused approach to the org, while deliberately silencing voices who have actual data (from surveys, analytics, user interviews, and more). I have seen Ashwin tell one group of stakeholders one thing, and then a day later tell other stakeholders the opposite, trying to get everyone on board with his vision. This intentional repression of data while simultaneously claiming to be the person who is revamping the org to be more data-driven is a self-interested political play that does not serve the larger needs of the org or it's users. I once told the President Ellen Pack that Ashwin was putting me in the position of either doing my job right (collecting data and sharing it with the people who need it) or else risking Ashwin getting rid of me. Ellen said to keep doing my job right, and not to worry. Half a year later, Ashwin laid off me along with half a dozen other people, effectively silencing anyone who had raised any concerns about his approaches to kids' privacy, data privacy, or his pet chatbot project.

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