While the interview process itself was streamlined, the offer stage revealed serious misalignment and instability on the company’s side. Terms that had already been discussed and mutually agreed upon—such as commission triggers, W-2 employment status, and payment timing—were repeatedly revised, removed, or contradicted in updated documents. Language would be settled one day and reversed in the next draft, creating avoidable confusion and eroding trust.
Despite raising reasonable, industry-standard clarifications (e.g., timely commission payout, protection from clawbacks, clarity on pricing), the company’s stance shifted back and forth without clear explanation. Instead of finalizing clean terms, critical items like classification, clawback limits, and non-compete provisions kept reappearing in different forms—often more restrictive than before.
The most disappointing part was the ending. After being told my negotiation that the partnership looked promising and how much they were looking forward to working with me, the company abruptly revoked the offer. When I politely asked for feedback or clarity on the blockers, I received no response—effectively ghosted after investing multiple weeks of time and strategic planning.
Key Takeaways for Future Candidates:
Be prepared for extensive back-and-forth during the offer stage.
Get every term in writing—verbal alignment may not hold.
If stability and clear agreements matter to you, approach the negotiation stage with caution.
Overall:
A professional interview process, but the offer experience raised serious questions about internal alignment and follow-through. Promising discussions at the leadership level ultimately did not translate to a reliable or respectful close.