Vantaggi
•Most employees are genuinely good people. Even leadership is not malicious on a personal level. The problem is competence and execution, not intent. •You will learn how a SaaS company can look successful externally while struggling internally. That experience alone is valuable. •Strong branding and optics. From the outside, the company looks far more stable and “enterprise” than it actually is.
Svantaggi
•Massive disconnect between narrative and reality. The company markets itself as a high-growth AI startup, but internally it operates more like a stagnant SMB SaaS business with weak fundamentals. The external story is far ahead of execution. •Leadership churn and instability. A cofounder leaving is not a small event. It was a major signal and the ripple effects were felt across morale, decision-making, and day-to-day operations. We also had the head of biz dev, GTM, Enablement, T&S and other divisions leave as well in the past 6 months. A mass exodus of leadership is not a great sign •Misplaced focus after the cofounder departure. After the cofounder left, it felt like the CEO became more focused on personal side projects (including a data/content initiative) than on stabilizing the business, fixing retention/onboarding, or addressing core GTM execution issues. The lack of urgency around fundamentals was alarming given the company’s situation. •Consistently weak GTM performance and marketing fundamentals. Marketing performance is consistently poor. Lead flow and pipeline quality are not where they need to be, and Sales is expected to manufacture results without a functioning demand engine. •Strategy without operational rigor. Goals, quotas, and priorities feel aspirational rather than data-driven. Targets are set with no realistic execution plan, and accountability rarely flows upward. •Sales compensation is heavily tilted against reps. The master comp plan gives the company broad discretion over accounts, ownership, and payouts. Accounts can be reassigned or commission split/decreased at any time, materially reducing earnings. This is one of the least rep-friendly comp structures I’ve seen in SaaS. •Account credit and ethics issues. Accounts have been reassigned, closed or split without proper credit to the original rep. Escalations are dismissed as “culture issues” rather than corrected through governance. •Product is mediocre and not differentiated. Post-COVID hiring demand masked weak differentiation. Payroll execution is dependent on third parties, which limits roadmap control and feature velocity. •Operational failures lose deals. The company has lost customers and prospects because onboarding and payroll capacity could not scale during critical periods. That is existential for a payroll vendor. •Optics over execution. Significant time and energy are spent on conferences, content, and external narrative while core issues like retention, onboarding capacity, and GTM fundamentals remain unresolved. •Layoffs handled abruptly and destabilize teams. The company laid off what looked like an entire team. The way it was handled felt sudden, impersonal, and deeply destabilizing. It reinforced that roles can disappear overnight regardless of performance. •Company feels like it’s being positioned for an exit. Decisions increasingly feel geared toward improving optics and preserving cash rather than building a durable business. It gives the impression the company is trying to look attractive for an acquisition instead of operating like a company planning to scale •Runway narrative vs. observable reality is concerning. The company has not publicly announced new primary fundraising since 2021, yet leadership repeatedly claims there are “years of runway.” At the same time, layoffs and cost-cutting suggest aggressive cash preservation. It raises serious concerns about the true financial position and whether future funding would require unfavorable terms (e.g., a bridge or down round). This is my interpretation, but the actions don’t match the reassurance. •Burnout culture with stagnant results. There is a belief that long hours equal growth. They don’t. Results have stagnated despite grind culture.