Vantaggi
In its earlier years, the company genuinely prioritized its people and culture, with leadership that appeared thoughtful, accessible, and invested in employee success.
Svantaggi
This is easily the most toxic company I’ve worked for. Before private equity entered, there was a strong team, real momentum, and leadership that appeared genuinely invested in the company’s people and direction. That foundation was dismantled quickly and without a thoughtful transition plan. Once private equity took control, the leadership team was replaced and the operating model shifted dramatically. Processes became rigid and heavily bureaucratic, slowing execution and removing ownership from teams. Decision-making required excessive approvals, priorities changed frequently, and teams were expected to deliver without the clarity or authority needed to be successful. What had once felt like a fast-moving startup became an environment where control and optics were prioritized over outcomes. Leadership applied a private-equity framework to a business that still required scrappiness and adaptability. That mismatch showed up daily in how work was planned, reviewed, and measured. Instead of empowering teams to solve problems, systems were put in place that constrained progress and made even straightforward work unnecessarily difficult. Communication from senior leadership further reinforced this disconnect. The CEO often leaned on buzzwords such as “measurable outcomes” to describe vision and strategy, but those concepts were rarely supported by concrete plans or accountability. At the same time, senior leaders frequently referenced prior experience running and selling companies without offering meaningful transparency or context, which raised credibility concerns when those claims were used to justify sweeping changes. Despite positioning themselves as SaaS experts, leadership demonstrated limited understanding of core SaaS fundamentals. Decisions around growth, retention, and unit economics often reflected a surface-level grasp of how a healthy SaaS business operates, contributing to strategies that felt disconnected from customer impact and long-term value creation. The COO/CPO’s communication style added to the strain. Interactions were often dismissive and unprofessional, setting a tone that discouraged open dialogue and reinforced a fear-based culture. Over time, trust eroded, collaboration declined, and high performers began to leave, taking critical institutional knowledge with them. What was presented as a major “transformation” appeared largely driven by existing investors reinvesting capital rather than meaningful operational improvement. Progress was overstated, execution gaps widened, and the culture continued to deteriorate. By the end, there was little transparency, no sense of stability, and minimal opportunity for growth. The role had a serious negative impact on my mental health, and leaving was ultimately a relief.