Chaotic Leadership, Frequent Layoffs & Toxic Environment - Director Pebl Employee Review

1.0
May 26, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Many colleagues are genuinely talented and dedicated. Some small teams foster a supportive community, looking out for one another despite the organizational challenges.

Cons

1. Extremely High Executive Turnover In the past two years, the company has rotated through 3x CEOs, 4xCTOs, 4xCPOs, 3x COOs etc. Each leadership change introduces a new vision and objectives, resulting in significant confusion and a lack of continuity. 2. Frequent Layoffs with Questionable Justifications Despite citing budget constraints, the company sometimes announces hiring surges shortly after layoffs. Some laid-off positions also appear to be refilled quickly by individuals who are closely acquainted with incoming executives. This raises questions about consistency in workforce planning and transparency. Additionally, letting go of employees with deep institutional knowledge has affected the organization’s ability to handle market-specific nuances. 3. DEI Efforts Undermined During one round of layoffs, a large portion of the Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion committee was let go. This move sent a concerning signal about the organization’s willingness to prioritize and maintain inclusive initiatives. 4. Short-Lived Strategies and Blame Culture Every few months, leadership rolls out new “game-changing” strategies. When results fail to materialize, accountability often falls on employees. Even capable “pilots” cannot properly operate a “plane” that needs fundamental structural improvements and leadership support. 5. Lack of Long-Term Vision Goals and plans shift frequently, leaving employees with little time to adjust before the next pivot. Morale suffers when people can’t see how day-to-day efforts align with a stable, overarching strategy. 6. Poor Communication and Accountability Company-wide updates are often vague, leading to speculation rather than clarity. Channels for constructive feedback are unclear, leaving employees unsure if their concerns are heard or addressed.

Explore other reviews about Pebl

5.0
Jun 4, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The company has been through a lot, and some of the older feedback seems tied to past chapters of the business. Right now, there is a clear push to move forward, especially in sales. The focus is on outbound, clearer territories, stronger partnerships, and getting the Pebl brand into the market after the rebrand. The EOR space is very competitive, but it is also a strong market to be in. Pebl has a good product, a strong reputation in the category, and a real opportunity to keep growing. The company is also putting meaningful energy behind technology and AI, which matters in an industry where a lot of providers can start to sound the same. This is a good environment for people who are self-starters. If you like having everything fully mapped out for you, it may be frustrating. But if you are comfortable with some ambiguity and want to have a hand in shaping how things get done, there is a lot of room to make an impact.

Cons

Some processes are still being figured out, and priorities can shift. That can make things feel messy at times. There can also be too many opinions in the room, which occasionally creates a lack of focus. The company has good ideas, but not every idea needs to become a priority. This is also not a clock-in, clock-out environment. The pace is fast, expectations are high, and people need to be comfortable with change. That is not a negative for everyone, but it is worth knowing before joining.

1.0
Jun 1, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Teams are incredibly dedicated, collaborative, and always willing to support one another through challenging transitions. - Strong focus on actively listening to and advocating for customers' needs at the team level.

Cons

- Executive leadership frequently dismisses employee concerns during all-hands calls and relies on empty promises to manage morale. - The company has gone through multiple rounds of layoffs with zero internal communication or accountability. Employees often only discover colleagues have been let go when they suddenly disappear from communication channels. - Following major organizational shifts, leadership failed to re-align priorities. This created an environment devoid of unified goals, leading to silos and internal division. - Despite the chaotic environment, the frontline employees work incredibly hard but receive little to no recognition or support from upper management.

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