Pros
Good place to gain experience but overall company culture is bad.
Cons
The organization’s biggest problems are undeniably driven from the top down. Leadership continues to hide behind the “startup” label despite operating for over five years, which has become a convenient excuse to justify chaos, lack of accountability, and the absence of sustainable processes. At some point, a company must mature, commit to structure, and stop using constant change as a substitute for strategy. Instead, what exists here is persistent instability. Priorities shift without warning, and processes are repeatedly overhauled before they can even prove effective. There is no clear long term direction, making it nearly impossible for teams to execute effectively or take ownership of meaningful outcomes. The product itself reflects this dysfunction. It is severely underdeveloped and lacks the quality expected at this stage of the company’s lifecycle. Releases are frequently pushed out with known bugs and insufficient testing, creating avoidable issues for customers. Rather than addressing the root causes such as rushed timelines, poor planning, and lack of quality control, leadership allows this pattern to continue. When customers inevitably become frustrated, accountability is misplaced. Product managers and customer facing teams are left to absorb the fallout despite having little control over the underlying issues. They are expected to manage escalations, repair trust, and explain failures they did not create. This reflects a broader cultural problem where responsibility is deflected instead of owned. Frequent restructuring and layoffs have only worsened the situation. Roles are eliminated without backfills, leaving remaining employees overextended and set up to fail. Layoffs are handled with little transparency, and leadership often proceeds as if nothing happened, with minimal acknowledgment of the impact on teams or morale. This creates a sense of instability and erodes trust across the organization. There is an ongoing expectation that individuals will absorb additional responsibilities well beyond their original scope, yet this is neither acknowledged nor fairly compensated. Morale is predictably low. There is little to no incentive for employees to go above and beyond when the disconnect between expectations and rewards is stark. Ultimately, this is a workplace where instability is normalized, effort is undervalued, and leadership continues to deflect responsibility rather than address the root causes of these ongoing issues.