Pros
There was a time when Voicentric was something special, a place of respectful disagreement, where diverse perspectives weren’t threats, but contributions. Where we could challenge ideas without being seen as challenging people. That culture of open dialogue has faded. Now, a difference in approach is too often treated as dissent, and dissent as disloyalty. There was a time when line managers truly wanted their teams to succeed. When success wasn’t measured by silence or alignment with personalities, but by growth, performance, and collaboration. Now, it feels like advancement depends more on staying quiet about leadership missteps than on any measure of ability, creativity, or integrity. We used to thrive in friendly competition, seeing who could hold the most meaningful calls, write the clearest notes, or bring in the most leads. That energy brought pride and purpose. But somewhere along the way, the energy shifted. It became about what you could get away with, not what you could contribute. And some of the very people who should have upheld the standard seemed to benefit most from breaking it. We once did our best work because doing good work mattered. Now, many do just enough, because effort, it seems, no longer earns respect or recognition. There was a time when being a PM meant being fair, approachable, and grounded. Talented and thoughtful. When managers were kind, civil, human. Today, this feels like haze of a memory. Disconnected from the people they lead, guarded, or even adversarial. It’s disheartening to see vulnerability met with coldness. When did this change? And why did we let it? Voicentric was never perfect. But it was once a place where many of us believed in what we were building, where hard work, critical thinking and team spirit had a place. Now, it feels like those values have been overshadowed by self-preservation, politics and a growing gap between words and actions. We haven’t just lost a sense of direction, we’ve lost a part of our soul. This is a call not for blame, but for reflection. A call to remember what made this company worth showing up for and to rebuild. With humility. With accountability. With care. Because the greatest loss of all would be believing that it can’t be better again.
Cons
Please see the above comments. We care and we won't stop fighting for what has been lost.