Pros
Some bright colleagues, some flexibility
Cons
The C-suite fundamentally distrusts employees and operates with outdated, command-and-control management. The CEO runs the company unilaterally; disagreement isn’t tolerated and usually results in people leaving. The layer below consists largely of yes-men focused on self-preservation rather than leadership.
Toxic behavior is normalized and effectively rewarded. The culture is competitive in the worst way—people succeed at others’ expense, dissent is punished, and setting boundaries is career-limiting.
Retention is extremely poor, especially for anyone working closely with the CEO. Typical tenure is 12–18 months, reinforcing the sense that people are expendable.
Product and engineering are heavily micromanaged by the CEO/CTO. There is no meaningful ownership of roadmaps, no ability to drive change, and no space for innovation beyond leadership’s personal ideas.
Organizational dysfunction. Product managers are reduced to content writers with no teams or authority—overworked, isolated, and unable to influence anything.
Product direction lacks a coherent narrative. Offerings are built for mass-market individual users, with enterprise needs treated as an afterthought or not supported at all.
Disconnected go-to-market teams. Marketing operates in a self-delusional bubble with unrealistic goals and constant blame-shifting. Sales often have no real understanding of what they’re selling and receive little to no enablement.
Engineers are pushed to deliver unrealistic or nonsensical work to please leadership. Sprint reviews are performative, and teams often know what they’re building won’t work but have no choice.
The company is effectively run as the CEO’s personal project, detached from market feedback. Teams build products the market has already rejected or over-engineered R&D that never ships. Employee expertise and external perspective are ignored unless they align with the CEO’s views.
Fear-based performance system. Twice a year, a forced “bottom 10%” is placed on PIPs with impossible goals. Peer ranking turns into a popularity contest. Everyone is labeled a “peak performer,” yet people are still fired to satisfy the quota. HR admits the system is broken but is powerless to change it.
Opaque career progression. Promotions, pay, and career growth depend on a closed, black-box “360” system—an odd contradiction for a company that claims to value transparency.
No strategy or focus. Teams are constantly spread thin, pulled in too many directions, and reacting rather than executing against any real plan.
Mandatory, leadership-driven leave. Company-wide leave is enforced when the CEO is on vacation (December and August). Personal flexibility is minimal and, in some regions, legally questionable—some teams have pushed back successfully, others haven’t.