There is no structure to the whole company. There are lots of levels in terms of colleagues and team leaders, supervisors, coordinators, directors, etc. However, the owner is the only one who has the final say and the rest of the structure beneath is a flat line. The team leaders, supervisors etc, do not stand a chance, as the so called Senior Leadership Team under mine them and talk directly with staff. May as well do away with all the layers as they are providing no value, you wont let them!
There most definitely is a 'blame' culture. In line with the above, the senior managers get involved in everything, to the point where others (who's job it is) then stop. Then the senior managers 'blame' everyone else for something not being done.
I can see from a lot of reviews on here, the owner has stated people didn't say about the negative things when they were in employment with Xbite. I can honestly say i have witnessed views being put across and the simple fact is the owner does not want to accept that they exist and simply does not want to listen, really cannot accept criticism. The reaction most recently is now platforms for communication even being dropped so that these messages are even more so hindered at now getting across. You want to listen but no one is allowed to talk?
The identity of what xbite was, has now changed. The simple fact is that through the pandemic, the business opted to go full steam ahead. Go 24/7 operating, move to bigger premises, employ people on ridiculous wages left, right and centre. Still promise customers things that no other company could deliver (and neither could xbite). Greed and naivety took over. Then when normality almost started to settle back in, extreme measures then have had to take place as the outgoings are simply not sustainable. People losing jobs, benefits being removed constantly and all that is said is we were in uncertain times and these things could not be avoided. Really? Everyone else saw it coming. By everyone, i mean people working at xbite as well as other businesses. You just kept throwing money at the situation, thinking that it would last forever. end result. Too much stock now that no one wants. Having to release staff to the point where there are now not enough to carry out the processes you implemented through the busy lockdown. premises too big. cut bonuses. change shift patterns repeatedly (so you could cut hourly wage). salary reviews stopped (the last one literally didn't even happen). Expected to work overtime for free.