Pros
Colleagues at the individual contributor level are generally hardworking, intelligent, and genuinely want the company to succeed. Unfortunately, their efforts are routinely wasted by poor leadership and lack of direction.
Cons
Leadership is the core problem at FuelCell Energy, starting at the top. The CEO, along with the heads of Sales, Finance, and Engineering, demonstrate poor strategic judgment and little accountability. There is a consistent pattern of grand concepts being announced that never reach execution. Engineering is a revolving door of half-finished products that never get launched, leaving the company with a cluttered portfolio of ideas rather than real, competitive offerings.
The company’s market representation is negligent at best. Sales overpromises, engineering underdelivers, and finance appears disconnected from operational reality. Products are discussed publicly long before they are viable, damaging credibility with customers and partners.
The Board of Directors provides no meaningful oversight. There is no visible intervention despite years of underperformance and repeated strategic failures.
HR is largely benign and ineffective. Employee concerns go unanswered, morale issues are ignored, and there is no meaningful advocacy for staff. Compensation is stagnant: no bonuses, no cost-of-living increases, and benefits continue to degrade. Health insurance is particularly poor and out of step with industry standards.
Meanwhile, executive leadership appears insulated from the consequences of the company’s decline. The contrast between executive lifestyle and employee sacrifice is difficult to ignore as the business continues to sink