Pros
There are some talented individual contributors who are trying to do good work despite a difficult operating environment. The company also has potential if leadership becomes more disciplined, realistic, and transparent about its priorities.
Cons
This is one of the most poorly structured and unnecessarily stressful environments I have experienced. The company presents itself as a startup-style organization, but in practice it operates with many of the worst habits of a startup: constant shifting priorities, unclear accountability, limited process discipline, and leadership that often appears inexperienced in scaling a healthy organization.
Turnover is a major concern. In my experience, the company has lost an unusually high number of salaried employees over the past two to three years, which is especially alarming given the relatively small size of the salaried workforce. That level of churn creates instability, weakens institutional knowledge, and makes it difficult for teams to build momentum.
The company also seems to be trying to copy elements of larger tech-company performance systems, including forced-ranking-style practices, without having the maturity, structure, or leadership alignment to make those systems constructive. Instead of motivating employees, it creates anxiety, internal competition, and confusion about what success actually looks like.
There is no clear company mission, vision, or operating plan that employees can genuinely rally around. Leadership communication often sounds aspirational but lacks substance, prioritization, or a believable path to execution. Employees are left trying to interpret broad statements that do not translate into clear goals, resources, or decision-making principles.
The leadership culture is also a serious issue. Senior-level discussions can become emotional, unproductive, and at times openly confrontational. Rather than creating alignment, some leaders contribute to tension and defensiveness. This makes it difficult to have honest business conversations, challenge assumptions, or solve problems in a mature way.
The location is another drawback. The office is in a remote part of Los Angeles County, yet the company offers little to no meaningful flexibility around hybrid work. That would be easier to accept if compensation, benefits, and career development were highly competitive, but they are not. Salaries and benefits are below what I would expect for the demands, commute, and stress level of the role.