*During my time there, the CEO was rarely in the office. She seemed to leave a lot of work on the VP and didn't want to be involved in the day to day of the company. I don't have a problem if your company is in a place growth-wise for that, but quite frankly they aren't and if she wants the company to grow, she needs to be more involved.
*Their policy regarding personal time and time off is appalling. Not only do you have to wait one whole year before getting 5 days of PTO (standard at most companies is 10 days to start), but any time you had a doctor's appointment or other appointment, they demanded to see a note, receipt, or proof that you were where you said you were. That was offensive and quite frankly made employees feel as though they were children in elementary school. They also demanded to know why you needed a personal day and what you were using it for, when the reality is those days were earned and it's not their business or concern when or why you take personal time.
*They expect a lot of work and long hours for small pay. They'd put employees on a low salary with the expectation that they'd be working on weekends and far more than 40 hours a week. Responsibilities and pay were not commensurate, and it created a lot of dissatisfaction and low morale.
*Turnover rate was incredibly high. They overturned staff at least 2-3 times in the three years I was there. Employees are constantly having to train new people just to have those people leave within 6 months. Company spends so much money on training new employees because they can't retain the ones they have. This also affects their business because their clients don't understand why their point of contact is consistently changing and their accounts are being botched because there are constantly new people coming in.