61% positive business outlook
Pros
Great work life balance and vacation time....
Cons
Many internal issues and felt like this last round of layoffs was to protect inadequate leaders vs hardworking employees. I understand companies do layoffs but this just felt like Senior management trying to protect themselves because they aren't doing an effective job. I really think there are some issues with the leadership team and it probably needs an overhaul. There was never any strategy from product outside of one small area. The rest of the business was left without any guidance or support. I really think the US/UK shared services model does not work. The UK and US just are entirely different markets and the UK at the end of the day doesn't really care about the US nor move as quickly.
Pros
Used to be a great company… until leadership turned it into a real-life corporate episode of The Real you know whats of Corporate America. The level of gaslighting, scripted responses, and “per my last email written by legal” energy is obnoxious. Instead of transparency, accountability, or actual strategy, they chose vibes, buzzwords, and conservative corporate theater. Morale is so deep in the ground at this point they might hit China before they hit profitability in the U.S. Wishing the remaining employees peace, clarity, and maybe a therapist covered by benefits as you deal with a team of people who's primary focus is to protect the 1%.
Cons
I’ve spent the last few weeks reflecting on the layoffs at Simply Business and the complete lack of meaningful transitional support provided to employees navigating serious health conditions. What continues to weigh on me most is healthcare. COBRA at over $1,000 a month is simply not affordable for many people who have suddenly lost their income. No one should have to choose between paying their mortgage and accessing the healthcare that literally keeps them alive. What’s difficult to reconcile is how little it would have cost a large corporation to extend healthcare coverage for employees facing severe medical circumstances while they searched for new jobs. For roughly an additional $2,000, people dealing with life-threatening or chronic health conditions could have had two additional months more of healthcare, a little more stability, safety, and peace of mind during an already traumatic transition. The severance provided was also below market value, which left me facing impossible choices between healthcare and keeping a roof over my head. During my time at SB, salaries were extremely low relative to the rising cost of living, which made it difficult to build meaningful financial security. The experience also forced me to reflect on a broader issue within corporate culture: how easily people become numbers once restructuring begins. Leadership language often emphasizes “people first,” “culture,” and “values,” but moments like layoffs are where a company’s actual values become visible. Despite having a few years of unimaginable trauma I showed up to the workplace with humor and authenticity and worked the hardest I could while navigating chronic illness, the loss of my mother, my cousin, and one of my closest friends — all while trying to survive in an increasingly difficult job market. I know I’m not the only one walking away from layoffs feeling exhausted, frightened, and deeply disillusioned by how disposable employees can become in systems designed primarily to protect corporations over human beings. I also recognize now how significantly compensation differed from comparable U.S. roles in the market, likely due to being tied to a UK-based team structure where salary expectations are very different. One silver lining through all of this has been realizing that many of the roles I’m now applying for pay more than double what I earned at SB. That has given me some hope, even while navigating the terrifying reality of being without health insurance for the moment. At the end of the day, I think the real measure of leadership is simple: when people were vulnerable, did you do everything reasonably possible to help them land safely? In my experience at SB, the answer was no. This is not a place that cares about its current or former employees.
Pros
Before they fired all the good people who knew what they were doing, the biggest pro was the people. Now that they are gone, working at SB is depressing and exhausting.
Cons
Unskilled leadership across the board. The company is floundering internally with massive layoffs of tenured employees, leaving contractors to come and go like a revolving door. SB is not people first. SB does not promote within. SB does not advocate for their best employees. SB does not give structured performance increases. Moral was low before I left, and I know from others still on board that morale is even lower now following massive layoffs. From what I’ve heard from those still there, it’s a complete circus now. Don’t work here unless you love chaos, misguided strategy, not being valued for the work you do, and mistreatment and mistrust from upper management.
Pros
A few nice people but mostly run by super toxic product and leadership team
Cons
This company used to care — now it’s become something I don’t recognize. Over the last few years leadership has abandoned the people who built this place: over 100 colleagues have been laid off and those left behind are treated like expendable cogs. Management’s decisions reflect priorities that aren’t about supporting employees. Pay is inadequate, morale is shattered, and respect for the workforce has evaporated. Leadership needs to own the consequences of its choices and start putting its people first — Employee experience matters and this most recent layoff shows SB believes in protecting toxic inefficient leadership with multiple homes and cars and private schools over hardworking employees. Also received reliable information that more layoffs are in store. If you did not get laid off- start looking for a job now.
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