Pros
There are many different departments at this company, each with its own culture, leadership style, and employee experience. I can only speak to my time within the Technology department, specifically the Product organization. Some teams are led by empathetic, highly competent managers who genuinely prioritize the well-being and growth of their people. These leaders build environments grounded in trust, respect, and collaboration—teams where individuals feel empowered to do their best work. My experience working with one such team has been one of the most rewarding chapters of my career.
Cons
So, why 1 star? Unfortunately, not all parts of the Product organization reflect those same values. One senior enterprise product leader in particular has created an exceptionally toxic and adversarial culture—driven by manipulation, dishonesty, and self-serving politics. This individual has engaged in a sustained campaign of bullying and sabotage directed toward a peer leader in an adjacent department. The behavior is not subtle—it is intentional, personal, and malicious. The goal appears to be clear: to discredit, undermine, and ultimately push that peer leader out of the organization. This campaign has included spreading false narratives, shifting blame for his own team’s failures, manipulating perceptions among executives, and encouraging direct reports to act with open hostility toward cross-functional partners. This leader’s conduct has created an adversarial and fearful dynamic that damages collaboration and morale company-wide. One of the most unethical aspects of this behavior has been deliberate interference in an adjacent team’s hiring process. This leader has repeatedly blocked the hiring of highly qualified candidates for a role that does not even report into their org, providing contradictory or nonsensical feedback as justification. The intent is plainly self-serving: to obstruct progress, weaken a peer’s credibility, and create an opening to install a personal friend in the role. That “friend” was previously employed by the company and was let go due to lackluster performance and a pattern of toxic, combative behavior—issues that are well-documented with HR. Attempting to rehire this individual not only violates basic ethical standards but signals a profound disregard for the company’s cultural values and its existing employees’ well-being. Multiple reports about this product leader’s behavior have been made to HR. Senior leadership—including the co-CEOs—are fully aware of the situation, AND YET no action has been taken. Its sickening. This lack of accountability sends a damning message: that bullying and unethical conduct are tolerated (if not quietly protected and rewarded), even when they cause real harm to teams and the business. Corporate cowardice at its finest. The impact has been severe. Morale among cross-functional partners has cratered, and the broader organization is suffering from eroded trust and disengagement. The candidate experience has become embarrassing—qualified, enthusiastic professionals endure drawn-out interview processes only to be rejected because of one person’s petty, politically motivated interference. In a highly competitive hiring market, this damages the company’s reputation and credibility with top talent. At this point, the issue has moved beyond culture—it’s a genuine business risk. One leader’s unchecked bullying, manipulation, and obstruction have jeopardized team health, talent retention, and the company’s ability to attract the kind of people who could help it grow.