Pros
Nothing else to highlight besides the work-life balance
Cons
The Board of Directors has permitted a corporate hierarchy characterized by a profound lack of accountability at the C-level, resulting in severe operational, cultural, and ethical repercussions. This absence of effective oversight has cultivated a workplace environment marked by pervasive hostility, toxicity, and abusive practices, which have significantly undermined organizational health, employee morale, and overall productivity. The failure to implement robust governance mechanisms has allowed these issues to persist, creating a detrimental impact on the company’s reputation and operational stability. Regardless of whether this lack of oversight is the result of incompetence, disengagement, or a willful disregard for governance responsibilities, the failure to implement meaningful control mechanisms or enforce clear accountability checkpoints has resulted in organizational outcomes that are both deeply troubling and increasingly difficult to justify—ethically, operationally, or financially. Within this structure, executive leadership operates with near-total autonomy, free to pursue personal interests without meaningful consequence, often at the direct expense of the business’s strategic priorities and internal cohesion. This pattern has become especially pronounced over the past 18 months, during which the effects of executive disengagement and poor decision-making have escalated into business-critical risks. Executives routinely disappear from essential workflows and decision points for extended periods, make irreversible and high-impact decisions without appropriate consultation or context, and misuse company funds or resources with impunity. Equally damaging is the neglect and mismanagement of their direct reports, which has created an unstable environment marked by high attrition, confusion around roles and responsibilities, and an erosion of institutional knowledge. Collectively, these behaviors reflect a leadership culture that prioritizes self-preservation over stewardship—and a board that has failed to intervene.