Azami Global Reviews

2.6

42% would recommend to a friend

(29 total reviews)
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Daniel Tjornelund

40% approve of CEO

35% positive business outlook

Azami Global has an employee rating of 2.6 out of 5 stars, based on 29 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Azami Global employee rating is 31% below average for employers within the Legal industry (3.8 stars).

Reviews by job title

29 reviews
2.0
6 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Work/life balance was really good.

Cons

Just don't want to add any negative experience

1.0
3 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

None. Nada. Zero. Nilch. Void.

Cons

Believe the reviews you read here. Protect your sanity and your soul by staying far, far away from Azami Global. Working here is a truly volatile, dehumanizing experience. Make no mistake, this company is on the absolute brink of collapse, and the blame falls squarely on the sheer, unadulterated stupidity of the entire C-suite. The executive team took a once-healthy company with healthy margins and drove it right into the ground in record time. Let's start from the top. The CEO genuinely thinks he’s the next Elon Musk, but in reality, you wouldn't trust him to run a hotdog stand. Instead of steering the ship, the CEO spends his time jet-setting all over the globe, taking useless meetings with investors and potential clients that yield absolutely nothing. It would be infinitely more valuable if the CEO bothered to learn what the workforce actually does, or what stages the company’s products are actually in—but he couldn’t care less about the reality on the ground. Then there is the CPO. The CPO has zero useful experience in product or R&D, and everything he touches turns to ash; he does far more harm than good. Instead of focusing on the actual work that would earn the company money, the CPO abuses ChatGPT all day to hallucinate completely useless ideas. He has no earthly idea what his subordinates do and actively sabotages their workflow. The only silver lining is that the CPO recently fired his entire organizational branch, so at least now he can't harm their processes anymore. The Chief Revenue Officer (CRO) is nothing more than a playground bully who either fires people or browbeats them into submission. The CRO walks around thinking he’s the smartest guy in the room, which couldn't be further from the truth. Meanwhile, the COO is simply rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic. The COO clearly sees the ship going down, but instead of trying to save what can be saved, he is too busy massaging the numbers and adjusting reports to fit a rosy, fictional narrative. When you look past the executives, the tragedy of Azami Global becomes clear: almost anyone below the C-level is actually incredibly hardworking, knowledgeable, and genuinely good at what they do. Honestly, if the entire C-suite took a six-month vacation, the non-executive workforce could easily right the ship and save the company. But the C-suite makes that impossible. The executives set completely pie-in-the-sky, unreal goals and then terminate staff before they can even lace up their boots to try and achieve them. Instead of owning the outcomes, the C-suite simply deflects blame downward. They constantly cycle through a revolving door of new scapegoats, pinning all the company's failures on the people who were let go or jumped ship. Meanwhile, the actual perpetrators—the ones with a 'C' in front of their title—stay indefinitely, repeating the exact same fundamental mistakes from their ivory towers. If anyone dares to speak up, the C-suite hits them with ridiculous, nonsensical corporate slogans designed to sweep criticism under the rug. The executive leadership weaponizes phrases like “internal locus of control” simply to shut down any and all pushback against the terrible decisions being made at the top. The brain drain has become so severe that it is literally the blind leading the blind. Institutional knowledge has been completely wiped out, and turnover is so high that staff members with barely any tenure are now forced to train brand-new arrivals on systems that neither of them knows the first thing about. This place is a textbook example of how toxic C-level leadership can destroy a good thing. Save yourself the heartache and look elsewhere.

4.0
8 Mar 2026

I love working for this company

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Smooth HR process. Competitive compensation and benefits. Work from home twice a week. Warm and friendly people and working environment. Supportive and reliable manager. Office is close to home. Office perks.

Cons

I can't think of anything so far.

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Glassdoor has 29 Azami Global reviews submitted anonymously by Azami Global employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Azami Global is right for you.