Pros
- Pay is alright for Portland, Oregon. - It could be a good way to get your foot in the door at Nike if you want to work there. - Misery loves company
Cons
I was with Thesis for 2.5 years so I had been there for long enough to get a good read of the company. During that time, I lost track of the number of lay-offs; it must have been around 3 or 4. All staff/town hall meetings were grueling. The CEO would openly yell and chastise the employees as if we were children. So many times it was 'If you don't want to be here, then leave,' which I guess is true, which is why so many people ended up leaving without having jobs lined up, but there were others who couldn't be so fortunate. The C-Level was a clicky group that was very out of touch with the actual happenings of the company. Some of them seem qualified, but the highest-ranking ones had been with the company from day 1, so they just moved to executive positions without having executive experience. It was very evident in how they acted and the few decisions they shared with us, I hope that beautiful building can get to 50% capacity someday. The real victims were the remote employees. They were remote for years, and then one day (After many layoffs and millions invested into a building in NW Portland), they were told to relocate or resign (I imagine this was done this way so they would not have to pay unemployment). They were given a week or 2 to come to a decision and were given a small stipend for the move. A person I didn't know personally agreed to relocate, and they were based on the East Coast. A week before they were set to relocate, they were laid off. Now they have a one-way ticket to Portland and no employer. Your performance does not impact how you are treated. I saw 2 different employees with fine reviews and had really good client relations. Then one day they were gone, just like that. I believe there was some friction with them and their Thesis supervisor so they got the boot. The work and performance were not the issue; it was a relationship/personality issue.