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Thank you for sharing your feedback. We are sorry this was your experience, and we take concerns about morale, stress, retention, leadership, and workplace culture seriously. We review employee feedback for specific themes we can act on, and we are committed to improving where feedback identifies clear opportunities to do better.
We also want to acknowledge that the language in this review focuses heavily on broad characterizations of our CEO, using terms such as “hostile,” “oppressive,” “unbearable,” and “attitude,” rather than specific examples of conduct, decisions, policies, or workplace practices. Specific feedback is much more useful to us because it allows us to investigate concerns, identify patterns, and take meaningful action.
There is a well-documented pattern in workplace research showing that women in leadership can face disproportionate personal criticism when they exercise authority, make difficult decisions, or occupy high-visibility executive roles. Studies on gender and leadership have found that successful women in traditionally male-coded leadership roles are more likely to be personally criticized, judged as less likable, and described as overly dominant or aggressive compared with men demonstrating similar leadership behavior. That does not mean every criticism is gender-based, and we do not dismiss employee concerns. It does mean we are careful to distinguish specific, actionable workplace feedback from broad personality attacks that mirror known bias patterns.
We welcome clear, good-faith feedback about workload, management practices, processes, and culture. We are committed to using that feedback constructively. We also believe leaders, including women leaders, should be evaluated on facts, decisions, outcomes, and behavior, not on gendered expectations about how authority should look or sound.
If you are open to sharing more specific information, we encourage you to contact us directly so we can better understand your concerns and address them appropriately.