I’ve spent 25 years at this company, mostly in the same role, believing that loyalty, consistency, and hard work would eventually be rewarded. Instead, I’ve watched good people, smart and committed people, get pushed out after giving decades of their lives to Dell. People who built relationships, hit numbers, raised families on the promise of stability, and were still treated as expendable when it became convenient.
Right now, it’s a deeply discouraging place to be. There is no real upward mobility anymore, no clear path forward, and no sense that experience or institutional knowledge matters. Employees are discarded quietly and almost casually, like yesterday’s problem. Leadership feels distant and disengaged, operating on autopilot, focused on protecting themselves and the balance sheet rather than the people doing the actual work.
Many roles now pay just enough to keep the lights on, but not enough to build a future. The work is heavier, the pressure is constant, and the rewards keep shrinking. Over time, it wears you down. You stop feeling proud of where you work. You stop believing things will improve. You watch your motivation fade, not because you stopped caring, but because the company stopped caring first.
It’s the kind of place that slowly drains the life out of you, not all at once, but quietly, year after year, until one day you realize how much time you’ve given and how little you’ve gotten back.