Pros
The people and the mission are the only things holding this together. Product management is full of capable, hardworking people, and the business has real potential. The talent is not the problem, and neither is the market. Top leadership is, along with the culture it has built around itself.
Cons
The people closest to the work have no real ownership of it. Product management is run so top down that ground level judgment is overridden by default. Decisions get second guessed, reworked, and reversed from above regardless of merit and regardless of who actually knows the subject matter best. The effect is predictable: when your best thinking is overruled often enough, you stop offering it. Capable people throttle back to the bare minimum, not because they lack ability, but because leadership trains the ambition out of them. Strong leaders build more leaders. That culture does not exist here. Authority is hoarded at the top, so no bench of trusted decision makers ever forms beneath it. The daily tone is where it tips into toxic. Recognition is nonexistent while criticism is constant, public, and meant to sting. Watch who stays and who goes and the whole story is there: strong, independent people do not survive here. They are treated as threats to be managed out, while the people who keep their heads down and nod along are rewarded, until that becomes the ceiling for the entire team. Mediocrity stops being a risk and becomes the operating standard. What remains is a revolving door that never stops turning, and a team that has learned to watch good colleagues leave without flinching.