Pros
Strategic Reach & Scale You’re operating at one of the few European companies where design directly influences a platform touching tens of millions of users. That reach makes your strategic initiatives (Boards, I&E, Trend work, Signature Moments) highly consequential, giving you an arena to experiment with ideas at scale. Strong Design Community Zalando has a mature design leadership structure (SVPs, VPs, Directors, Principal ICs) and rituals (check-ins, UI Jams, hiring frameworks). This environment lets you shape culture, mentor others, and contribute to systemic improvements — which aligns well with your leadership and community-building focus. Autonomy for Exploration You’ve been able to drive visionary projects (Trend Spotter, Pulse & Play, Signature Moments) and even weave in speculative and future-facing concepts. This level of trust in experimentation would be hard to replicate in more rigid or less design-mature organizations.
Cons
Organizational Politics & Silos You’ve had to fight multiple times for fair recognition (promotions, evaluation loops) despite VP backing. Design leadership decisions can get overridden by People/Org politics (as with Rachel’s case). This creates frustration and energy drain. Execution vs. Vision Tension While you thrive in vision-shaping, Zalando often pulls back into short-term delivery pressures (e.g., “house-in-order,” pattern consistency). That tension between strategic exploration and operational execution can limit the space for the kind of work you want to champion. Scale vs. Craft Trade-off With 100+ designers and multiple overlapping initiatives, it’s easy for ownership to blur. Your projects sometimes compete for visibility or resources, and decision-making slows down. For someone who thrives on clarity, depth, and narrative coherence, this environment can feel fragmented.