Pros
There are genuinely talented people at this company. The current programs are exciting, and the company has opportunities that most space startups would envy. Several teams are capable of delivering exceptional results despite extremely difficult circumstances.
Cons
The company suffers from a severe lack of strategic direction and long-term planning. Priorities change constantly, major decisions appear reactive rather than deliberate, and there is little evidence of a coherent roadmap tying together technology development, business strategy, staffing, and execution. Teams are repeatedly asked to sprint toward shifting goals without the structure or stability required to succeed. Employee retention is clearly not treated as a priority, and employee concerns are dismissed rather than addressed constructively. Experienced people leave or stop caring, institutional knowledge walks out the door, and little effort is made to build sustainable systems or preserve continuity. Instead of addressing root causes, leadership surrounds themselves with only “yes men” to wilfully ignore the dysfunction and retaliates against those who try to improve the company or deliver on commitments. The culture has become increasingly toxic and demoralizing. Fear, politics, blame shifting, and paranoid decision-making have replaced healthy debate and meritocracy. Nearly all employees feel unheard, undervalued, or burned out. 90% of key technical staff are looking for (or have secured) other opportunities. Morale has deteriorated significantly, particularly among experienced personnel who understand what effective aerospace execution should look like. It feels to many that leadership is attempting to disguise the flight risk of the true contributors to prospective investors by rushing to hire a vapid director suite that they can falsely attribute the successes to. The biggest issue is leadership at the top. The CEO is disconnected from operational realities and lacks sufficient understanding of the underlying technology and engineering challenges facing the company. Communication from leadership is frequently viewed internally as misleading or inconsistent, which has severely damaged trust across the organization. There is far too much focus on appearances, fundraising narratives, and short-term reactions, and not enough focus on building a durable company capable of executing complex missions reliably. As a result, the company’s reputation has suffered significantly. Achieving success on their current mission will be due only to the determination and talent of the technical team, in spite of the poor exec suite. What makes this especially frustrating is that the company does not lack talent, opportunity, or technical potential. I believe the company could be highly successful under different leadership and with a more mature operational culture.