Pros
I’ll give the company two solid points: 1 point for the peers. You’ll work with genuinely talented, hardworking people — and after surviving a few pivots and fire drills together, you’ll likely form lifelong bonds. Nothing builds camaraderie quite like shared chaos. 1 point for the ambition. The problems the company is trying to solve are genuinely interesting, and the partnerships they’ve managed to sign are impressive. On paper, the vision is exciting. Execution… is a separate adventure.
Cons
Management is the biggest problem at the company. The founding team is capable—especially the CEO, who is one of the best salespeople I’ve seen—which is likely the main reason the company has survived this long. However, many of the managers directly below them struggle with effective leadership. They may be nice people and competent as individuals, but they often fail to lead teams effectively or empower them. The result is constant pivoting, unrealistic deadlines, lack of trust, heavy micromanagement, and repeated layoffs that frequently remove key contributors. Execution suffers, morale drops, and institutional knowledge disappears. Leadership often introduces instability rather than clarity, resulting in a net-negative impact on the organization. The fact that these patterns persist ultimately reflects broader issues at the top as well.