short-sighted leadership who is nice, but not kind - Anonymous employee Lambda Employee Review

1.0
31 May 2023
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good pay Remote work decent work/life balance Thriving industry

Cons

Cofounders have not worked anywhere else - this doesn't mean Lambda is their first job as a C-level exec. It is their first job. Period. Under normal circumstances, that would be acceptable if they were open minded and welcome to feedback and constructive criticism. However, this is far from the case. A prior review stated that almost the entire product team was let go the day the CEO came back from parental leave. This is true, with the addition of almost the entire indirect sales team, leaving millions of dollars in the pipeline untouched and without followup for the remainder of 2022. An irresponsible amount of revenue was left on the table. Not only was this organizational decision made in a vacuum, (and HR was unaware of the firings until afterwards), but there was no acknowledgement of the mistake in further all-hands meetings. We all heard through the grapevine that "The CEO acknowledges that he made a mistake in the way this was executed” but we never heard him say that explicitly. So how was the rest of the team expected to trust him, or the rest of the leadership team moving forward? From that day forward, any sense of psychological safety went out the window. This lack of knowledge around how to lead a company reflects in the culture. For example: The CEO runs a weekly all-hands meeting where many times, he will show up without anything prepared. No agenda, no presentation, just 30 minutes of him trying to fill the time, awkwardly pulling "company updates" out of nowhere. To me, this communicated a lack of respect for everyone’s time, and set the example that meeting preparation does not matter. I left these meetings feeling frustrated that my time wasn’t being valued, and confused as to how we were going to “make it” as a startup if we couldn’t take our own meetings seriously. Culture of micromanagement: The micromanagement comes from a place of hiring inexperienced managers, who aren’t given the appropriate tools to enable a high-performing team. My personal experience (and I was considered “senior” in my individual contributing role) was that my manager would sit in on meetings with me, as a “silent attendee” - clearly came from a lack of trust. This “babysitting” took away from my perceived credibility, and I had several conversations with them asking what would give them confidence to let me fly on my own? They acknowledged it was unreasonable to babysit me, and shared that they would back off. But then would follow up, scrutinizing every little detail of my emails to external parties, internal team members, I got slacked about once every 3 hours asking for an update on something that was a 3-month long deliverable. The few performance reviews I had were always landing me between “meets” and “exceeds” expectations, so I was confused about the micromanagement, and felt like we couldn’t have strategic discussions in our one on ones, nor could I exercise my critical thinking skills with this level of micromanagement. Beyond all of this, there was one C-level exec who is by far the worst individual I’ve ever crossed paths with professionally. They were toxic, conniving, and a negative leader with unrealistic expectations of their collaborators. Many people had issues dealing with this individual, yet all of our concerns were overlooked by the CEO due to the fact that they were a different personality to the people who “mattered,” and met their deliverables.

Explore other reviews about Lambda

5.0
14 Jan 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Comp is excellent Strong, high-trust culture Teammates are excellent

Cons

401k match is so-so Hiring has recently mostly been for the Bay Area

1.0
8 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Lambda pays above market salaries and has a good benefits package relative to other pre-IPO businesses that are out there. There are pockets of good people who genuinely believe in the mission and do good work, though those are few and far between to be honest. The work life balance is really good and if you're on the right team you can make a lot per hour to ship absolutely nothing of value since there is little if any oversight to actually doing your job. If you're in a place in your career where you want to rest and vest because you have a family or a lot of hobbies outside of work this is about as good as it comes.

Cons

If you're an organized and ambitious professional who wants to operate at a high performance level and be around peers that do the same this will be hell for you and you'll probably be lied to during the interview panel about how awesome everyone is. You will not be able to do anything to move the needle forward on things that drive results without attaching yourself politically to folks that are a part of the inner circle since everything is incredibly top down driven. The company is so politically messy that everything takes 5x longer than what you'd be able to do at a less chaotic organization. The CEO and CTO are probably the worst I have ever seen in my decade plus career yet refuse to follow the boards instructions to get professional management help. I'm ashamed to say I work for these leaders. I'd estimate that over half of the company is on the spectrum and if you're in a customer facing or adjacent role it takes an incredibly amount of effort and feather ruffling to shield the customer from the nightmare that is Lambda. There will be many times where you'll be utterly embarrassed to be an employee at the company and you'll get gaslit into things being improved but they never will. Please do yourself a favor and do not work here.

7
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