Pros
Work from home Unique challenge to solve for
Cons
Ditto operates as a revolving door, consistently unable to attract or retain talent due to weak leadership and structural issues that set employees up for failure from day one. There is no formal onboarding or training program, and institutional knowledge walks out the door faster than it can be documented, leaving both new hires and customers perpetually unsupported. This is not a "sink or swim" environment. It is one where attrition is inevitable and the question is simply how long you can endure before it catches up with you. Leadership's primary focus appears to be protecting investor optics by trimming operating margins through commission restructuring, reductions in force, and delayed commission payments. Sales employees should be aware that commissions are withheld until accounts receivable collects payment from the customer, a policy that directly shifts financial risk onto individual contributors. The CEO's conduct warrants specific mention. He touts on company wide calls closed deals to the company, only to walk back those claims the following week. Most notably, the CEO delivered a pre-recorded RIF announcement that he drafted with Claude affecting 30% of the workforce, then characterized it publicly the next day as a defining leadership moment. He sent his Claude script out over slack to the whole company so everyone could see what he stated in his recording. The tone-deafness of that framing speaks for itself. On the product side, there is little cohesive vision. Significant turnover within the Product team has left roadmap continuity in question, and a much hyped new product launch has been in a perpetual "coming soon" state for well over a year. The departure of the entire Marketing team and VP of Sales was met not with experienced backfills, but with the consolidation of both functions under a leader with no prior software SaaS industry experience with predictable results. The public sector product may have genuine merit, but realizing that potential would require organizational stability that does not currently exist. Candidates should research thoroughly and calibrate expectations accordingly before accepting an offer.