A talented company held back by poor communication
Pros
The product is by far and away Bloom's greatest strength. The engineering team is phenomenal and created an efficient, effective, reliable product that is perfect for the AI era. The sales team is full of technical sales staff equipped with the training and knowledge to not only sell the product but also educate the customer throughout the deal's lifecycle. The people on the ground are what make this company shine. This, along with the company's informal structure, creates opportunities for new hires to quickly take on complex, fulfilling, engaging work that teaches valuable, transferable skills.
Cons
Communication Bloom is highly political and operates with an informal structure that creates significant communication gaps and a persistent lack of transparency. Leadership often overlooks—or at times appears to intentionally ignore—internal communication, leaving employees feeling uninformed and disconnected. For example, the company eliminated its internal communications team and went nearly a year without one. This communication style and informal political dynamic also shape the company’s organizational structure. Although the company is nominally a flat organization, there is a constantly shifting, unofficial hierarchy of influence and power. Employees often struggle to understand priorities because the individuals who hold informal authority change frequently. Processes In my experience, many senior leaders view processes as obstacles rather than enablers, which leads to an aversion to formal systems. As a result, systemization becomes decentralized and inconsistent, with individual employees creating their own isolated processes based on personal initiative and political capital. These fragmented approaches often fail to integrate, creating inefficiencies across teams. This also leads to the purchase of several expensive, sometimes even redundant, software applications, with only a fraction of their capabilities used. Training There is no meaningful training or onboarding program for the majority of roles. When the company claimed they’d prioritize building such programs— and even hired staff and leaders to develop them—the entire team responsible for this work was quietly eliminated within a few months. This negatively impacts the average employee and actually leads to many employees not even knowing what the company sells and/or does. Manager and director Roles Function as individual contributors Many managers and directors are expected to operate primarily as individual contributors while simultaneously overseeing teams. This expectation, from what I heard, was not communicated in most interviews and/or job postings. This dual expectation creates significant strain on their time and leaves little time for actual people management. In practice, it often prevents managers from effectively empowering, advocating for, or developing their teams. From what I observed, the workload and lack of structural support left several managers overwhelmed and unable to fulfill the leadership responsibilities their roles imply. Feedback There are few, if any, reliable avenues for employees to provide feedback. Combined with the issues above, this leaves many staff members overextended, without the resources or channels to advocate for themselves, and feeling lost in a system that does not want to support them. Employees need to feel that their perspectives matter and that leadership is genuinely interested in improving the workplace. When the company conducted its first annual employee survey, leadership emphasized that it would become a yearly practice. However, the survey was not repeated during the following two years—coinciding with layoffs and headcount reductions. When the survey returned in 2025 and revealed dissatisfaction with leadership, the response was unfortunately underwhelming. Leaders publicly challenged employees to voice concerns openly rather than anonymously. This reaction contributed to a broader perception that feedback is not only undervalued but actively discouraged. Overall Culture and Impact Taken together, these issues create an environment where employees often feel disoriented, undervalued, and unsure of how to succeed. The lack of clear communication, inconsistent processes, and limited managerial support contribute to a culture where people spend more time navigating internal ambiguity than focusing on meaningful work. High performers can find themselves burned out, while newer employees struggle to gain a footing in an environment without structure. The result is a workplace that feels reactive rather than strategic, and one where I at least found long‑term growth difficult to imagine.