Pros
The mission is noble. The CEO has a good moral compass for what he's trying to achieve. Relative to other competitors, BEAM is more advanced. The operations team is world class.
Cons
Nearly everything else. The Programs function is poorly structured and lacks effective operational leadership. Cross-functional coordination is inconsistent, priorities shift without clear rationale, and decision-making is often reactive rather than strategic. As a result, execution suffers and accountability is unevenly applied. The organizational culture deteriorated over time from collaborative to risk-averse. Communication norms favor escalation over problem-solving, and minor issues are often treated as larger failures while substantive process gaps remain unresolved. This creates an environment where trust erodes quickly and psychological safety is limited. Compensation is below market and benefits are uncompetitive, making it difficult to retain experienced talent. While the mission is compelling, it is increasingly used to offset structural and cultural shortcomings. The cumulative impact has been sustained attrition, including the departure of long-tenured, high-performing employees who chose to leave primarily due to the working environment rather than compensation alone. The mission deserves far better leadership than it currently has.