Pros
Compensation is better than most.
Cons
Leadership culture is one of the biggest challenges at this company. There is a consistent lack of respect, professionalism, and support from senior leadership, which creates an environment driven more by pressure and control than by collaboration or trust. Communication is often top-down and dismissive, and employees are not treated as valued contributors. This was the most challenging and least supportive workplace culture I have encountered. Despite publicly emphasizing values around putting the child first, the internal culture does not reflect meaningful support for working parents. Expectations around availability and responsiveness often disregard the realities of parenting, and there is little flexibility or empathy when conflicts arise. Employees with families often face greater pressure and less understanding, creating an uneven and discouraging work environment. There also appears to be favoritism toward certain teams and individuals, particularly those who mirror leadership’s preferred working style, background (if you come from a large consulting firm the ceo loves you because your a mirror of her) and level of personal availability. Employees who maintain healthy boundaries or have responsibilities outside of work can be perceived as less committed, regardless of their performance. There is also a noticeable gap between how the product and company capabilities are presented externally and the reality of what is fully built and operational. Certain capabilities are positioned as more mature or complete than they are in practice, which creates challenges for employees responsible for representing the product accurately and maintaining trust with customers and partners. This disconnect can put employees in difficult positions and erode confidence internally. The company’s mission-driven messaging and origin story are heavily emphasized, but internally this can sometimes feel more like branding than a reflection of day-to-day decision-making or employee experience. Leadership often appears more focused on external perception than on addressing internal cultural and operational issues raised by employees. Turnover is high, and morale suffers as a result. There is a clear disconnect between how the company presents itself externally and the internal environment employees actually experience. Concerns are not addressed in a meaningful way, and accountability at the leadership level appears limited. At times, the compensation feels less like recognition and more like a tradeoff for tolerating a difficult and unsupportive work environment. Many employees remain for financial reasons, not because the culture is healthy or sustainable. Empathy is heavily promoted in messaging, but there is a clear gap between what is said and what is actually practiced.