Working at BizIQ is like being trapped in a slow-motion collapse where every day feels heavier than the last, and leadership watches with crossed arms and mandatory cult like chants during company wide meetings to “improve morale”. This isn’t a company. It’s a cautionary tale.
BizIQ is a masterclass in corporate rot. This place is a toxic, chaotic disaster from top to bottom, run by a leadership team completely divorced from reality and totally indifferent to the well-being of its employees.
There’s no recognition, no upward mobility, no strategy—just a spinning carousel of blame, confusion, and burnout. You are expected to carry the weight of five roles with no real tools, training, or support. If you ask for help, you’re seen as weak. If you speak up, you’re ignored or punished. If you succeed, you’re punished with even more work.
The Customer Success department is the prime example of how not to run a company. Executive Leadership changes direction every other week with zero strategy or logic. You’re expected to “figure it out” without training, support, or even acknowledgment. There is no career development, no recognition, and no growth—just more work, more pressure, and the same bottom-barrel pay while they dangle the (now moldy) carrot in front of your face.
The bonus system? There isn’t one—not really. The old structure was useless and broken. The “new” system was pitched as a revolution but is a smokescreen to avoid paying anyone anything. Performance targets are deliberately vague, constantly shifting, and so unrealistic it feels like a sick joke. It’s a rigged game, and you’re set up to lose.
New KPIs are a complete joke—totally unachievable, disconnected from real performance, and used as a tool to deny you the very bonuses they dangle in front of you. The system is rigged, plain and simple.
Cross-departmental communication is a nightmare. You’ll beg for basic collaboration only to be stonewalled, ghosted, or blamed. Every project requires baby-sitting other teams, spoon-feeding details, and cleaning up chaos that isn’t yours—because no one is actually accountable for anything here except you
Leadership is obsessed with pretending we’re an “all-in-one solution” for digital marketing, even though our tools are outdated, our processes are broken, and the products don’t meet actual client needs. That reckless expansion strategy has only tanked morale, driven away talent, and piled more work onto already maxed-out teams.
Internally, it feels like a simulation designed to test how long you can go without breaking. You’ll train new hires who leave within months. You’ll watch smart, talented coworkers wither into apathy. And you’ll wonder when you stopped caring too.
Externally, the company spews out flashy branding and hollow claims about being “industry-leading,” but it’s all performance art. What’s really happening is declining sales, failing products, collapsing morale, and management blaming the workers instead of fixing their own incompetence.
Leadership still markets BizIQ as “industry-leading” while everything behind the scenes is held together by duct tape and denial. They sell a lie to the public, to clients, and most offensively, to the people doing the actual work.
The culture is suffocating. Employee voices are ignored, ideas are shut down, and morale is in free fall. The few good people left are either burning out or looking for the exit. And why wouldn’t they? You’re expected to deliver more with less, and any reward for going above and beyond is either fake, delayed, or quietly canceled. And the CEO flies above it all—literally and figuratively—on a private jet, untouched by the devastation below