Behind the polished employer branding, the management culture in parts of EMEA can be challenging. From the beginning, expectations are not always clearly defined and can change rapidly, making it difficult to understand how success is measured. Feedback is often informal and reactive rather than structured or constructive, and management style may lean toward micromanagement rather than trust and autonomy, very unpleasant and heavy work atmosphere.
While office perks and amenities are emphasized (mostly snacks and Apple products), they sometimes feel like surface-level benefits that mask a harsher day-to-day reality. Decision-making lacks transparency, and HR involvement when concerns are raised is limited or comes very late. In this context, behaviors that could reasonably be perceived as inappropriate or harassing do not always appear to be addressed with the seriousness one would expect. More broadly, management responsibilities in some teams appear to be shaped more by prior internal exposure, informal networks, or cultural proximity than by demonstrated people-management competence, which undermines psychological safety and fairness.