A failing company - Anonymous employee MiQ Employee Review

1.0
Dec 6, 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good work life balance for the most part. coworkers are friendly.

Cons

The most pathetic set of senior leaders I have ever experienced in my career. Typical egotistical men that have zero vision nor tangible success (you know who you are) in tandem with pushover men that have no thoughts of their own. Huge disconnect between senior leadership vision and how we're actually making profit. All earnings are driven by junior to director level members with no guidance or support from above. MiQ Canada tolerates inappropriate behaviour such as yelling, demeaning, lying, and discrimination against races and genders that are non-cis-male. Perhaps because all senior leaders are old white males.

Explore other reviews about MiQ

5.0
Sep 9, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

People, pay, experiences are awesome

Cons

Lot of time commitment needed

1
2.0
Jun 19, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Solid Benefits - Only 2 Days in office per week (for now) - Generous PTO - Flexible hours due to regular collaboration with the COE teams in India

Cons

I had a mixed experience at MiQ, with some talented colleagues and solid learning opportunities, but overall it was frustrating. During my time there, much of my team turned over, creating constant disruption and uncertainty. One of the biggest challenges was the frequent shifting of priorities, with projects and initiatives often changing direction, making it difficult to feel that work was being executed consistently. There were also regular requests from leadership that felt misaligned with core responsibilities, contributing to a sense of wasted time and effort and overall inconsistency week to week. From an organizational perspective, decision-making seemed highly centralized, which sometimes slowed progress and limited autonomy for managers and teams. Exec Leadership frequently spoke about the company's positive culture and employee experience, but that messaging often felt disconnected from broader employee sentiment. Career growth and promotion processes were another concern, with an informal expectation that employees spend at least two years in role before being considered for promotion, and advancement often feeling tied as much to internal politics and visibility as to performance and impact. These types of promotion discussions were disappointing, with positive performance feedback not translating into clear or timely explanations regarding advancement decisions.

2
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