Pros
There may have been perceived pros, but they only served the company’s image, not its employees or long-term health. At first this professional front attracted clients, investors, and job candidates who didn't see the internal dysfunction. Temporarily skilled professionals joined, thinking it was a high-performing culture until they realized the truth. As long as the employees played along the company appeared to function without open conflict, but it was a fragile kind of order - kind of like seeing the ever perfect life of a couple or family plastered all over social media - the truth was really behind closed doors and rarely was it ever happy. Management was not only good at hiding red flags but also at spinning problems to avoid fallout, or just outright lying. As the toxicity festered and the reputation of the company caught up to them, good employees burnt out or left and morale collapsed from the inside out.
Cons
Requests for help were met with excuses about limited capacity, yet those same limitations never seemed to apply to a select group of favored individuals. This inconsistency speaks volumes about the management culture. A toxic culture hidden behind professionalism is like a cracked foundation beneath a freshly painted house; it might look fine today, but it won't hold up under pressure.