Pros
Great place to learn exactly what not to tolerate in your next role. Nothing builds appreciation for competent leadership faster than surviving this experience.
Cons
1. You’ll happily be expected to cover for coworkers when they’re on vacation, but don’t expect the same courtesy when it’s your turn. Funny how “teamwork” only seems to flow one direction. 2. PTO apparently comes with a seniority caste system. Long-timers can disappear like they’re European aristocracy on summer holiday, while newer employees get to fight for scraps. 3. Hands down the most disorganized product team I’ve seen in my career. Communication is inconsistent, priorities shift constantly, and clarity appears to be treated like an optional feature. Good luck getting the product team to actually answer your question. 4. The good old boys club is alive and well. If you don’t fit the dominant social/cultural mold, don’t be surprised if advancement feels noticeably harder. 5. Upper management loves the “do more with less” mantra, which is corporate code for “we’re not hiring enough people, so congrats on your three extra jobs with zero extra pay.” 6. Company-sponsored service projects seem less about genuine service and more about polishing the company image, sometimes with little regard for employees’ personal or family obligations. 7. Hiring practices raised serious concerns about fairness and consistency, with certain groups seemingly treated differently in ways that did not inspire confidence in an equitable process. 8. Middle management at BrainStorm deserves its own special mention. Somehow they’ve mastered the art of being simultaneously overinvolved in the wrong things and completely absent where actual leadership is needed. Expect endless meetings, shifting priorities, vague direction, and a magical ability to create process without solving problems. Decision-making often feels driven more by ego, politics, and optics than competence or employee well-being. Instead of empowering teams, they often add friction, confusion, and unnecessary bureaucracy to already stressful workloads. If you enjoy being micromanaged one moment and abandoned the next, you’ll fit right in.