Pros
The company has many talented, thoughtful, and committed employees who genuinely care about customers and building meaningful products. There are strong teams across the organization, and many people continue doing excellent work despite increasing organizational strain.
Cons
One of the most difficult aspects of working here was watching accountability become increasingly uneven at the executive level. Over time, there appeared to be a growing disconnect between leadership narratives and what many teams were actually experiencing operationally. Product leadership held significant influence over company direction and decision-making, but when initiatives underperformed or operational challenges emerged, responsibility was often redirected toward operations, finance, marketing, data, or external factors rather than prompting deeper evaluation of product strategy, prioritization, execution quality, or customer experience. There was also growing frustration around prioritization and investment decisions. Cross-functional teams regularly surfaced practical opportunities tied to customer pain points, funnel optimization, operational realities, and measurable business impact, yet leadership attention often gravitated toward larger conceptual initiatives that consumed significant time and resources without ultimately launching or delivering meaningful results. As these patterns repeated, trust across teams deteriorated. Experienced employees and cross-functional partners often felt their expertise was undervalued or overridden, while decision-making became increasingly concentrated within a smaller leadership circle. Over time, many employees became hesitant to openly challenge decisions or raise concerns directly, leading to a culture where candid conversations happened privately rather than transparently in the room. A particularly difficult contradiction was seeing substantial investment continue toward exploratory product initiatives that ultimately never launched, while other parts of the organization faced tighter budgets, operational constraints, or workforce reductions. The inconsistency in accountability standards became difficult for many employees to ignore. Perhaps most concerning was the widening gap between communicated success and broader company outcomes. Even when larger company goals were missed, product leadership messaging often emphasized selective metrics or reframed results in ways that made honest organizational reflection and accountability increasingly difficult.