Pros
The experience at Polly is difficult to explain because there is a stark contrast between the product and the leadership. The benefits are competitive, and the product itself has real potential.
Cons
Unfortunately, those positives are overshadowed by serious leadership and management issues. One of the most telling signs is the constant turnover among senior leadership. Senior managers seem to pass through a revolving door, with very few lasting any meaningful amount of time. There are only a handful of leaders with real tenure. One is highly respected and genuinely capable, but their influence appears limited to a specific area of the business. The other long-tenured leaders are, in my opinion, among the company's biggest liabilities. One senior leader operates as an extreme micromanager. Employees are routinely instructed exactly what to say to customers, sometimes down to the word-for-word content of emails, including grammatical errors. Team members are expected to copy leadership on communications to ensure compliance rather than to encourage independent judgment or customer advocacy. The environment feels less focused on empowering employees and more focused on control. Another senior leader has a reputation for being unreliable and difficult to trust. Problems are often ignored until they become urgent customer-facing issues. Rather than proactively addressing risks, issues are allowed to escalate until they become crises. At that point, rushed solutions are implemented, often requiring multiple rounds of corrections because the underlying problem was never properly addressed in the first place. The result is an environment where employees frequently feel they cannot rely on management's assurances. If a leader tells you that something has been completed, your safest course of action is to independently verify it. Trust but verify becomes a survival skill. Failure to do so can damage customer relationships and put employees in difficult positions when clients discover commitments were not actually fulfilled. From a customer perspective, getting everything documented in writing is essential. Verbal commitments have little value if there is no accountability behind them. If something is important to your business, insist on written confirmation and follow up frequently. Perhaps most concerning is the culture surrounding accountability. When customer frustrations inevitably surface, the focus often appears to shift toward identifying scapegoats rather than addressing the root causes of recurring problems. This creates a cycle where the same issues continue to reappear while employee morale and customer confidence steadily erode. Polly has a product with significant potential and some talented people throughout the organization. However, until leadership addresses the issues of micromanagement, accountability, trust, and executive turnover, those strengths will continue to be undermined. In my view, the greatest threat to the company's future is not the market, competition, or technology—it is its leadership.