Pros
There are still some genuinely talented and customer-focused people in the business. Many frontline employees work hard despite the environment, and for many, colleagues are the only reason they stay as long as they do.
Kontras
If you read the (odd) review posted by the CEO/Founder himself ' Safe and Sturdy' - it will confirm the executive culture outlined in the other reviews. The common issues raised across reviews are not isolated, and they continue to reflect deeper cultural and leadership problems. Ironically, many of the strongest criticisms do not come from “vindictive ex-employees,” but from current staff who remain in the business and wait until they can speak anonymously. That alone should say something. From a sales perspective, this became an extremely difficult environment to succeed in. There is very little consistency, limited cross-functional collaboration, and a culture heavily driven by administration, reporting, and internal control rather than customer outcomes. Repetitive reporting, shifting directives, and constant changes in priorities make it difficult to focus on actual selling or supporting customers. Executive leadership is increasingly disconnected from both customers and frontline teams. Decisions often appear to come from an executive layer that is distant from market reality, slow to adapt, and resistant to feedback. Innovation feels limited, product evolution is slow, and the business often feels backward compared with faster-moving competitors. A major issue is that compliance often appears to be rewarded more than capability. People who simply align with executive direction tend to remain, while experienced, capable people regularly move through what feels like a revolving door. The common denominator has not been the talented professionals who leave and continue successful careers elsewhere, but the leadership culture and those continuing to drive a broken internal environment. For sales, compensation is another major concern. Commission structures are overly complex, difficult to calculate transparently and increasingly disconnected from realistic earning potential. Targets and payment structures often create frustration rather than motivation, leaving many questioning whether strong performance is fairly recognised. The end result is that the average bonus achievement at Soprano for BDM's is 0-10%. There is also a broader trust issue. When employees are hired they are often told 'all concerns will be addressed' only to see reversals on important issues such as bonuses, strategy, priorities, or commercial commitments. Over time, this creates a culture where morale drops, accountability weakens, and trust in leadership continues to erode. At its core, Soprano feels like a company with strong people trapped inside an outdated leadership culture built on pressure, control, inconsistency, and fear rather than collaboration, innovation, and accountability.