Pros
BeyondTrust provided meaningful opportunities to work in a fast-growing cybersecurity company, take on significant responsibility, and build experience during a period of rapid expansion. There are talented employees throughout the organization, and the company’s growth can create opportunities for people who have strong internal sponsorship.
Cons
The culture can be highly political and relationship-driven. Advancement often appears to depend more on visibility, internal alliances, and proximity to senior leadership than on performance, experience, or subject-matter expertise. There is a significant amount of behind-the-scenes positioning, gossip, and credit-taking. Employees may receive support publicly but encounter very different behavior privately. Trust between peers and leaders can therefore be difficult to establish. Some senior HR leaders appear more focused on managing upward and maintaining favor with the executive team than on advocating for their employees, challenging poor decisions, or providing candid leadership. Employees should not assume that strong performance or loyalty will result in support when difficult situations arise. The organization also has a tendency to place people into roles before they have the experience required to perform them effectively, sometimes seemingly as a cost-saving measure. This can leave inexperienced leaders making major decisions while more qualified employees are overlooked. The result is inconsistency, weak accountability, and leaders presenting confidence without having the operational knowledge to support it. I also observed behavior that could feel dismissive or chauvinistic, particularly when strong women challenged decisions or advocated directly for themselves. These behaviors were not always addressed consistently.