I saw this Benchmark Electronics Response from a week ago, “Thank you for sharing your perspective and for your many years at Benchmark. We appreciate the time you’ve invested and your willingness to raise specific concerns. We understand how difficult it is when employees feel trust or accountability may be lacking. While we can’t comment on individual situations, we take feedback about communication, process adherence, and leadership behaviors seriously. Acting with integrity, caring for our teams, and continually improving how we operate are core to our values. We remain focused on strengthening leadership capability, reinforcing consistent processes, and supporting open, fact based dialogue across our sites.”
Benchmark, this is not a matter of perception—it is a matter of reality. The concern is not isolated opinion, but consistent, observable behavior. Feedback related to communication, process adherence, and leadership behaviors is not being meaningfully acted upon.
If leadership behaviors and rituals were truly taken seriously, they would be consistently practiced by senior management. They are not. Nor are they being demonstrated across the divisions. Leadership rituals and behaviors are largely absent in day to day operations, and no division has achieved the stated “Emerald” standard.
As a result, the organization’s stated values—integrity, care for teams, and continuous improvement—are not reflected in practice. There is little evidence of sustained focus on strengthening leadership capability or reinforcing consistent processes.
The Nashua division is a clear example of these failures. Chronic employee retention issues, scrap and excess material inventory exceeding $3 million in liability point to systemic breakdowns in leadership, oversight, and operational discipline. The volume of unused material on hand is so significant that it presents both financial and physical space concerns. Instead of fixing the problem, they hide it at an offsite warehouse when Corporate visits.
I strongly recommend an unannounced visit to the Nashua division. Walk the floor, speak directly with frontline employees, interview managers, and review records and processes firsthand. Doing so will reveal significant gaps between what is being reported upward and what is actually occurring. There is a substantial amount of information and reality that senior leadership is not being fully made aware of.