Leadership decisions consistently prioritize short term financial and IPO readiness metrics over organizational stability and trust. Frequent reorganizations, recurring RIFs, benefit erosion, and mandate changes create chronic instability and anxiety.
Employee feedback mechanisms exist, but critical input is discouraged or implicitly penalized, undermining psychological safety. Responsibility for morale is pushed downward to people managers without corresponding accountability or behavioral change at the executive level.
Values are heavily enforced symbolically, while leadership behavior often contradicts the principles being promoted.
The operating model demands high precision in goal setting despite vague and shifting strategic priorities, resulting in misalignment and inevitable failure to meet success criteria.
This environment disproportionately drives out high potential, ambitious talent, those most capable of operating elsewhere with less pay but greater trust and respect. Attrition risk is currently masked by market conditions but will accelerate sharply once external opportunities improve.