Pros
Some of the team are full of talented, genuinely kind individuals. Flexibility with hybrid work is appreciated. Some strong members — there's real potential if leadership allowed them to thrive.
Cons
- It’s a one-way street: Bridebook expects you to go above and beyond constantly, but shows little consideration for your personal life, health, or commitments. - Strategic direction is frequently reactive and unclear. Leadership often pivots without proper data, wasting time and effort. - Leadership talks about data-driven decisions but rarely acts on insights unless they confirm biases. - There’s a performative culture around "caring," but in practice, you’re expected to sacrifice evenings, weekends, and boundaries for shifting priorities and unrealistic deadlines. - You’re hired for your expertise but rarely trusted to act on it. Strategic decisions often come from the top based on instinct, not data. - High turnover speaks for itself - Women's perspectives are too often undervalued in male-dominated leadership environments. - The company continues to claim we're understaffed, yet hires at an unsustainable pace. In reality, we’re overstaffed with a large number of inexperienced, junior-level employees—many of whom require weeks to complete tasks that a competent professional could finish in under an hour. This bloated, low-calibre workforce is burning through investor capital with no clear or scalable plan in sight. - Cutting company spending and headcount by 50% would have little to no impact on the actual work output achieved each month or revenues. - The business model feels fundamentally misleading — scraping data from external websites to create fake global venue directories, then sending venues fake enquiries, often without their knowledge or consent to be listed on Bridebook in the first place