Pros
For many years, this was genuinely a forward-thinking and people-centric organization. The previous environment fostered significant employee autonomy, valued team contributions, and promoted innovation from the ground up. The mission and product were strong, and the culture encouraged internal growth and work-life balance. Long-term employees will remember a time when leadership was truly supportive and invested in the success of the staff.
Cons
Unfortunately, the company culture has undergone a dramatic and detrimental shift since the installment of the new leadership team. The current executive team is noticeably less employee-centric and appears primarily concerned with achieving short-term metrics to satisfy the board of directors, often at the expense of staff morale and retention. The previous emphasis on autonomy has been replaced with narrow-minded, top-down directives and excessive micromanagement. Decision-making is centralized, removing the creative license that the most talented employees once enjoyed. Furthermore, there is a perceived lack of integrity in how internal communications are handled and how commitments to employees are managed, leading to a significant erosion of trust. The focus is no longer on long-term, sustainable growth through people, but on immediate, visible results.