Pros
Smart, capable peers who care deeply about customers
• Strong product with real market pull
• Immediate exposure to complex customers and high-impact work
Cons
Extreme scope creep: The TAM role absorbs work from multiple functions without title, pay, or staffing adjustments
• Impossible expectations: TAMs are expected to be experts across dozens of products and industries with inadequate training, documentation, or support
• Renewal accountability without ownership: TAMs do the work that determines renewals — technical execution, risk mitigation, escalations — while credit and compensation sit elsewhere
• Compensation regression: Pay bands have tightened while responsibility, accountability, and stress have increased
• Intentional understaffing: Senior leadership has publicly stated that teams are deliberately understaffed as an operating strategy, despite clear downstream impacts on workload, burnout, and attrition
• Consistently poor work-life balance: Escalations routinely spill into nights, weekends, and personal time
• Micromanagement culture: Activity is closely monitored, second-guessed, and retrospectively critiqued regardless of outcomes
• Deflection instead of solutions: Structural concerns about workload and sustainability are met with “be a team player” rhetoric
• External-first leadership with rapid churn: Leaders are hired externally rather than developed internally, then quickly cycle out once exposed to the scope, pressure, and lack of structural support — leaving teams beneath them to absorb the fallout
• Unrealistic ramp: New hires are expected to learn an enormous product surface area while carrying full production scope
• Attrition as a multiplier: Departures immediately increase load on remaining team members, accelerating burnout
• Low morale: Teams are exhausted, disengaged, and actively planning exits