Almost everyone I know who has been hired in the last two to three years has privately expressed that their actual job scope is significantly smaller than what was described during recruiting, in many cases smaller than roles they previously held at more junior levels.
Decision-making authority does not sit with the people doing the work. Nearly everything must be bubbled up, which creates a bottleneck culture where speed, ownership, and accountability are structurally impossible. The result is that talented people learn to stop taking initiative — not because they lack capability, but because initiative without permission is treated as a problem.
Executives receive highly sanitized information. I have personally witnessed people being silenced in real time during group discussions to prevent uncomfortable truths from surfacing, allowing false narratives to persist at the leadership level. The distance between executives and the teams doing the work is so great that leadership lacks real visibility into what is actually happening, what skills exist internally, and what has already been tried. This leads to a cycle of outsourcing work to consultants and bringing in new hires to "discover" things the organization already knew — at significantly higher cost and with no institutional memory.
Agile and transformation language is used liberally, but actual practices across roles, ceremonies, and delivery are far behind industry benchmarks. The experience is not transferable to organizations that practice these disciplines with rigor; and coming from a rigorous agile organization will mean you don't actually know how to operate here.
Career growth mechanisms do not function. Even when targets are met and exceptional reviews are received, there is no meaningful follow-through on development plans. The standard response to any internal feedback — "talk to your manager" — is performative when managers themselves have acknowledged they lack the authority to change anything. Multiple people across multiple levels have raised these same issues directly, only to hear some version of "we agree, but our hands are tied."
If you are considering joining: ask specifically what happened to the last person in your role. Ask whether the strategic work described in the job posting actually exists as a priority. And pay close attention to whether anyone below director level is willing to speak candidly with you during the interview process.