• Unattainable Performance Benchmarks: There is a growing disconnect between monthly quotas and the actual velocity of the sales cycle. In recent periods, the team median attainment has been less than 50%. Fewer than 10% of the team consistently hit quota in 2025.
• Systemic Failure of Partner Trust: The internal decision to gut the support team while simultaneously adding new fees has created a toxic external environment. Our channel partners are currently forced to act as unpaid, zero-interest financiers for the company, absorbing the fallout of billing inaccuracies and unresolved credits that have persisted for over a year. This operational negligence, combined with high-profile data exposure incidents, has fundamentally soured Pax8’s reputation in the MSP community.
• Internal Bottlenecks: Sales success is currently hindered by severe delays in Support, Professional Services, and Product Launches. Being penalized for production metrics while deals are stalled in internal administrative queues creates an environment where failure is mathematically inevitable.
• The "Peter Principle" in Leadership: A byproduct of rapid growth is a visible gap at the mid-management level. Tactical contributors are being promoted into leadership roles based on historical sales data alone, without adequate training in people operations. This has resulted in a management layer that struggles with the nuance of long-term retention and professional decorum.
• Erosion of Psychological Safety: The management style in this department frequently relies on a pattern of subtle disparagement and microaggressions. Rather than providing constructive coaching, leadership often resorts to personal put-downs and exclusionary remarks. This approach has replaced bravery with survivalism. When veteran employees are dismissed with scripted platitudes, the message to the remaining team is clear: avoid risk at all costs.
• The High Cost of "Cultural Debt": The company is currently "borrowing" against its future by burning out its most loyal people. Replacing veterans who carry the company’s DNA with a revolving door of new hires creates a "cultural debt" that will eventually lead to a collapse in client trust. You cannot scale a business built on relationships using impersonal, binary tactics.