Heading in the wrong direction - Director Point B Employee Review

2.0
21 Dec 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Some really smart and hard-working coworkers. Mostly local work with little travel required.

Cons

Most of what you read about that's positive about Point B is from its past. All the best place to work awards come from its historical focus on culture. Unfortunately, the culture has been killed off over the last 12+ months since taking on a majority investment from a PE firm. Now you're left with an organization that has no clear direction that has lost the trust of its people. The below average pay was historically justified by the great culture, which historically was a real benefit. With that culture dead, you've now got an organization that underpays its people, doesn't treat them with any level of integrity, and is full of disheartened employees looking for the door. People no longer matter.

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Point B Response
3y
Thank you for taking the time to write a review. On behalf of Point B’s leadership team, I am deeply saddened to hear of your experience with Point B and your outlook for our firm’s future. While we continue to write Point B’s story, we need to hear and understand all perspectives to find and act on our areas of improvement. We strongly encourage you to reach out to your 1:1 or to me directly to address your concerns further.

Explore other reviews about Point B

5.0
28 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Fantastic culture and a close knit relationship within the entire Phoenix geo. Amazing Finance leadership that will show you the rope

Cons

Lower pay and bonus compared to the industry but that is to be expected as consulting industry was shrinking back then. C-Suite also changed strategy & direction multiple times so it was chaotic for a good while

1.0
21 Jan 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Point B used to be an exceptional firm. When I joined, it genuinely operated for the benefit of its people. The culture was strong, leadership was respected, employees felt invested (literally and figuratively), and the firm had deep, trusted relationships with longtime clients. Many smart, capable people built real careers here, and that version of Point B was something special.

Cons

Everything changed after the private equity acquisition - and not for the better. What followed was a textbook fumbled transition. New leadership was brought in, cost-cutting became the primary strategy, and the firm gradually abandoned the very things that made it successful. There were repeated rounds of layoffs, constant instability, and a steady erosion of benefits and trust. The employee ownership model was effectively dismantled, culminating in the termination of the ESOP at an abysmal price that left many employee-shareholders feeling burned. In the process, leadership managed to lose longtime clients and loyal employees. Relationships that had taken years to build were damaged or lost. Morale cratered. The culture hollowed out. What once felt like a people-first consulting firm began to feel like an asset being managed down. This wasn’t bad luck or market conditions alone — it was the predictable outcome of applying the standard private equity playbook to a people-driven business. Slash costs, swap leadership, extract value, and deal with the fallout later. The result is a company that is now a shell of its former self.

4
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