Pros
Would like to preface that this is a 100 percent accurate experience. Made a lot of awesome friends and met some amazing people during my time spent with Lula. - Over my time spent at Lula, I gained real hands-on experience as a Project Coordinator and Account Manager: managing regional accounts, supporting renewals, troubleshooting issues, and serving as a primary point of contact for clients. The skills transfer well to other organizations. - I worked alongside several teammates who genuinely cared about clients and tried to do the right thing. Peer relationships and day-to-day collaboration were the best part of the role. - The pace and variety of situations (client escalations, changing priorities, internal alignment challenges) helped me grow in communication, relationship management, and problem-solving. - If you’re early in your career, you can build a solid foundation and resume experience—just go in with clear expectations about culture and leadership style.
Cons
- Compensation transparency felt limited: I later learned that another Account Manager doing essentially the same work was paid significantly more (roughly a $10k difference). There wasn’t clear communication around pay ranges, leveling, or what drives salary growth, which made compensation feel inconsistent. -NOT CLEAR ON HOW LULA IDENTIFIES VALUE. - Incentives/equity felt unevenly communicated: There were discussions about stock/equity-related incentives, but eligibility criteria didn’t seem clearly defined. It also felt like employees were discouraged from discussing it openly, which created discomfort and confusion amongst the teams. - Limited visibility into role planning: I eventually learned that someone else was being positioned to take on responsibilities aligned with my role before I was told my job was ending. I would have preferred more direct communication earlier, even if it was a difficult conversation. - Departure process lacked clarity: After 3.5 years, I was told my role was ending and that it wasn’t tied to performance. There were no prior formal warnings, performance plans, or specific feedback connected to the decision. Regardless of the reason, the abruptness made it hard to process and plan. -Culture could feel political: People often seemed cautious about what they shared regarding pay, role changes, or internal decisions. That created a “keep your head down” atmosphere at times. -Communication around exits was often minimal: There wasn’t much context shared with me, which I found to be alarming considering the time spent at the company, This left a lot room for speculation and increased uncertainty for those remaining at Lula as well.