Strong company reputation, but my experience in Talent Acquisition raised serious leadership concerns
Pros
I worked with several talented people and had positive interactions with multiple business stakeholders. The company has strong brand recognition, meaningful business lines, and some leaders who genuinely value recruiting partnership
Cons
My experience in Talent Acquisition became increasingly difficult because the management style I experienced felt highly controlling, punitive, and focused more on scrutiny than coaching, workload calibration, or clear success metrics. In my opinion, the environment became one where a manager’s narrative could outweigh production, stakeholder feedback, and the actual complexity of the workload. I raised concerns through internal channels and later experienced increased scrutiny, formal performance action, and ultimately termination with what I viewed as a vague and incomplete explanation. From my perspective, the process lacked fairness, transparency, and meaningful opportunity to address concerns through objective measures. I would caution candidates and employees to pay close attention to the specific leadership chain they would report into, not just the broader company reputation. Advice to Management: Ensure performance concerns are handled with clear metrics, documented coaching, balanced stakeholder input, and genuine review of workload realities. A company’s employment brand is affected not only by candidate experience, but also by how internal employees are treated when they raise concerns. Advice to Management Create a more balanced and objective management culture where performance concerns are addressed through clear metrics, documented coaching, realistic workload assessment, and fair review of employee contributions. Leadership should ensure that managers are held accountable not only for results, but also for how they communicate, support, coach, and retain employees. When employees raise concerns internally, those concerns should be reviewed independently and without retaliation or increased scrutiny. Strong production, stakeholder feedback, workload realities, and prior contributions should be considered before making major employment decisions. A company’s employment brand is shaped not only by how candidates are treated, but also by how employees are treated behind the scenes.