D&D is collapsing under ego-driven leadership — not lack of talent Let’s be real — D&D has been stuck for years under leaders who either can’t make a decision or make the wrong ones for the wrong reasons. Delivery doesn’t happen based on what’s best for the business — it happens because someone with a title wants something, even when everyone knows it’s not the right call. Resources get pulled in, timelines get squeezed, people push themselves to the limit, and right before value is delivered, the plug gets pulled and it’s labeled a failure.
People know this pattern now. Many document everything just to protect themselves because the sabotage and blame culture are real. It’s not a healthy environment — those who care about doing the right thing and delivering real outcomes are exhausted, disheartened, and being driven out.
The root cause? Leadership that values optics over outcomes. Titles and perception matter more than experience, skill, or integrity. Promotions happen for image or politics, not merit, and the people who genuinely care end up carrying the load for those who don’t.
This all starts at the top — with an ego-driven CFO and a VP who was originally brought in as a consultant-level manager, then rapidly promoted to Director and VP in record time without the experience or qualifications to lead such a critical area. It appeared to be an optics move — adding a “female leader” to signal progress — but that backfired badly. Some leaders, regardless of gender, make the environment worse, not better.
The VP’s actions drove out one of the few genuinely strong and trusted female leaders who actually brought accountability and collaboration. Since her departure, what’s left is a small circle of leadership disconnected from technology, people, and business reality. The first big decision they made was to expand the role of someone already facing multiple internal HR complaints for poor management — because that person once held a VP title at another company in a completely different industry. That’s the level of judgment driving decisions here.
It’s a cycle: underqualified, politically protected leaders are promoted, the capable people around them leave or burn out, and then those same leaders are rewarded with even more responsibility. D&D has become a case study in how to demoralize top performers through bad optics and ego.
And yes, many of us are still here — not because we’re naïve, but because we’ve invested so much and are waiting to see if things finally change, or at least to collect what we’ve earned. But make no mistake, if this leadership structure stays the same after bonuses and retention payouts, it’s going to be a mass exit. If you think the systems are bad now, wait until the people still holding everything together finally leave.