Despite working at Pathlabs for years and believing they cared about my growth, I learned the hard way that trust and loyalty don’t go both ways. The company talks endlessly about “People First” and “Master the Craft,” but the reality is the opposite. Leadership doesn’t trust employees to do the jobs they were hired for, and that behavior cascades through every level of management. Executives frequently claim that “no one knows how to do their job,” which fuels a culture of micromanagement, second-guessing, and fear. Managers insist on being the “experts” in everything, leaving no room for individual contributors to actually use their skills or own their domain. Feedback isn’t welcomed; challenging a process or advocating for career growth is met with subtle warnings—like being told to “stop talking if you want to succeed.” Promotions and raises are consistently delayed or denied with shifting explanations, and compensation is not as competitive as leadership insists. Ultimately, Pathlabs will eliminate positions without regard for contributions, skill, or loyalty, and without any meaningful acknowledgment of impact. Employees often privately express misery or frustration, but the broader culture encourages silence and compliance. Leaving Pathlabs made me doubt my own abilities, but succeeding immediately in a far healthier, more structured company made it clear the issue wasn’t me—it was the environment.