Avantages
Remote work is real: Fully work-from-home options are respected. Benefits and leave policies: Time-off, health, and wellness benefits are strong and genuinely helpful.
Inconvénients
Uneven treatment and advancement: In my experience, some employees — particularly women and people of color — faced challenges in advancement despite strong performance. Opportunities and recognition were often tied to visibility, relationships, or department placement rather than measurable results. Performance reviews and feedback inconsistencies: I observed that high-performing individuals of the aforementioned demographics, in particular, disproportionately received negative reviews or feedback that did not align with their results. This pattern was difficult to understand as an employee and could impact career progression. Equity initiatives exist, but don’t fully address gaps: ERGs and diversity-focused programs are in place and provide support, but systemic inequities were still apparent in decision-making and career development opportunities. More polish than substance: The company invests heavily in image and messaging, while basic execution and internal alignment remain weak. Frontline staff absorb the consequences: Individual contributors handle frustrated customers while leadership remains distant from the impact of their decisions, the lack of systems, and poor planning. Leadership is not capable of devising action plans, solutions, or support. Product value is overstated: Guild positions itself as a critical career/education benefit, but increasingly functions as an unnecessary intermediary. Poor leadership: Many senior leaders appear unprepared to manage teams at scale. Frequent title changes and promotions continue for leadership, but no concrete responsibility or skill is visible.