Pros
Location, leadership before the chaos
Cons
Where to even begin with this masterpiece of corporate self-destruction? Let’s start with the so-called “Org Restructure,” or as I like to call it, “The Hunger Games: Corporate Edition.” Apparently, the grand plan here was to replace seasoned professionals with a cast of characters so ill-suited for their roles, it’s like they were hired from a community theater production of Office Space. The April layoffs? Oh, just a fun little icebreaker for the new regime! They wiped out talent and institutional knowledge like a toddler wipes out a Lego tower—no strategy, just chaos. And the pièce de résistance? Forcing the old leaders out and swapping them for the CIO’s “special friends” in a game of professional musical chairs where the only rule is “favoritism first, competence optional.” Then there’s the brilliant “silent firing” tactic. You get two options: either humiliate yourself in a training session to prove you’re not a complete moron (spoiler: you’ll still be treated like one), or walk out with a severance package that smells faintly of legal gray area. How considerate! And for those who naively stayed? They were stripped of their dignity, meaningful work, and any chance of success. It’s basically a real-life simulation of Survivor, except there’s no million-dollar prize—just demotion and despair. Now, let’s talk IT. The favoritism here is so strong, it’s practically a superpower. We’ve got engineers with decades of experience being demoted to Associate Engineers while someone’s tech-illiterate buddy is gifted a Senior Engineer title. Maybe they’re just trying to create a sitcom: “Engineers and the Incompetents!” But wait, there’s more! Entire teams are being imported wholesale from previous organizations like it’s a Bring-Your-Friends-to-Work Day. Interviews? Oh, please. They’re just awkward meet-and-greets before the predetermined offer letter goes out. And the leadership? A chef’s kiss of dysfunction. Picture a group of Product Managers, directors stumbling around like contestants on a reality show titled “Who Wants to Be a Puppet?” Their only job is to echo whatever pearls of wisdom the CIO drops, regardless of how nonsensical or destructive. Accountability? Nope. It’s all about finding someone else to blame—and let’s be honest, development teams are just sitting ducks in this blame-shifting carnival. But hey, teamwork is alive and well—as long as it means stealing credit for other people’s work and throwing them under the bus when things go south. And speaking up? That’s adorable. If you dare to question the madness, or have an opinion you’re immediately labeled a “nay-sayer” and banished to the Island of Misfit Employees. In conclusion, CoBank has truly outdone itself. It’s no longer a workplace; it’s a case study on how to implode a company from the inside out. Leadership here isn’t just bad—it’s inspirationally bad. I mean, they’ve set a new standard for turning a once-great company into a flaming dumpster fire. Bravo!