Pros
Remote Pay Benefits Freedom Perks
Cons
What a mess. Here’s how it actually played out: Leadership (execs, board, CEO) were not honest about the founder/CEO’s departure. We were given a polished story, but it was clear she didn’t “just decide to leave” — she was pushed out. The previous CEO resigned in November 2024. The founder was made interim CEO, then officially CEO about six months later, and then removed roughly two months after that. In my view, she was completely unprepared for the job and visibly out of her depth. That’s not just on her — that’s on the board for putting someone clearly unfit into the role and pretending it was a real plan. The board now claims Jeff was “always the CEO plan.” That doesn’t line up with reality. He was brought in around May to rebuild Sales after the former CRO realized he was on the chopping block. Instead of doing a proper CEO search, they did a quick internal assessment and handed Jeff the role, largely because he’d previously worked for one of the investors. That’s not strategy; that’s convenience. Then came the RIF/layoff: The company just did a layoff that shocked most people, because in September Jeff told everyone there were “no plans for a RIF.” Two months later, people are out. That destroys trust. Some people were genuinely relieved to be leaving. Others literally raised their hands to be included because they’d had enough. The all-hands after the RIF made it worse: The CFO basically told everyone: if everything goes to plan, maybe we can hit ~$33M in two years and then the equity might be worth something. Two years. Why would strong performers stay and “wait and hope” here when they can join a real growth company where the equity already has meaningful upside? Meanwhile, the core of the business is still a mess: Customer Success and Sales are both struggling. CS can’t stop the churn. The current CS manager hasn’t been able to turn it around, so now they’re bringing in a VP to “fix” it. Sales is a graveyard. They keep trying to sell a basic, undifferentiated product to basic companies. There’s no clear path to meaningful growth when the product is mediocre and the strategy never changes. This is what a broken company looks like: leadership spin, rushed CEO decisions, broken promises about layoffs, no credible growth story, and a product that doesn’t earn the kind of future they keep trying to sell.