Ultimately, Cascade suffers as a result of its top-heavy, inefficient leadership. At the highest levels of the company much time is spent developing new structures, processes and procedures. Efficiency is always the goal, but increased bureaucracy is usually the outcome. The leadership means well, but seems to have little understanding of the challenges the company faces. They also absorb a significant amount of the company's salary, limiting the ability to fill much-needed positions below them. Ironically, these leaders are continually analyzing and reorganizing those below them in an effort to get more out of the company.
The chain of command is poorly defined and employees do not feel empowered to make their own decisions. As a result, issues will make their way from the lowest levels of the company to the highest and back down, usually without a meaningful decision. Many, many poor decisions are made because there is no time left to do the right thing. Almost as often, no decision is made at all and opportunities are lost due to an inability to act.
It is easy to see that Cascade's brands are in decline. Their largest brands, Therm-a-Rest and MSR, are constantly losing market share to smaller, more nimble competitors. The company's smallest brands are even slower to respond and receive less investment, meaning they are falling behind at an even faster rate. The CDI solution to this problem is to adapt the products and processes they have to new markets and user groups. The result is an ever faster erosion of their brand faithful, and many failed attempts at expansion. It is hard to imagine this cycle of failure carrying the company through the next ten years.
The comfortable, easy-going workplace with low expectations comes with a sharp downside -- a toxic, defeatist culture that discourages progress and disdains those who would rise above it. CDI's lax culture attracts employees who are unmotivated and content with having jobs, rather than careers. Many of them have seen repeated changes, reorgs and initiatives handed down, but have experienced no real difference in their roles or the performance of the company. Over time they settled in, and now go about their jobs with no regard for career advancement, goals, improvement or timelines. Disruptions to their 9:30 - 4 routine are met with contempt, and requests for additional effort are scorned. In many departments, any display of motivation or leadership is met with negativity from coworkers and managers alike.
Compensation at CDI is low, even for the Outdoor Industry. The company tries to make up for this fact by touting its benefits packages, which are actually sub par, and the perks of profit sharing and prodeals. The truth is the profit sharing amounts to an extra paycheck per year at its best, and the prodeals are rarely better than you can do shopping online, especially with big-ticket items like bikes and skis. (Most new employees will not have to worry about this, as CDI is now filling full-time positions with contractors paid on an hourly basis.)
As almost everyone else has noted, Cascade is beyond stagnant when it comes to career growth. The company does nothing to invest in its employees, offering limited career education only when it is directly related to your current position. New positions are rare and managers are inclined to hire from outside rather than promote from within. Those who advance usually do so by waiting quietly for many years. When they move up it is because of seniority alone and they are often unqualified for their new positions. If you're hiring, be wary of anyone who's spent a significant portion of their career at CD -- it's not a good sign. If you're applying for a job at Cascade take a hard look at what they're promising. It's probably not as good as it sounds.