The company’s growth appears to rely heavily on a small group of very high-performing employees who consistently take on extremely large scopes of work. While leadership frequently speaks about preventing burnout, the day-to-day expectations can still involve late nights, weekend work, and work during vacation.
When concerns about workload or capacity are raised, the feedback often centers on individual prioritization; this can make burnout feel more like a personal issue than a structural one.
The environment can also feel highly competitive among peers, which can sometimes work against collaboration and create unnecessary internal pressure, and back-stabbing.
There are many talented and hardworking people across the organization, but clearer prioritization from executive leadership and a more sustainable approach to workload would meaningfully improve the employee experience.