Worldpay’s Procurement function is a case study in how bad leadership can destroy morale, efficiency, and integrity. The department is top-heavy, leaderless, and ethically compromised. The senior leaders talk about transparency and collaboration but operate through fear, favoritism, and politics.
There are layers of directors, VPs, and a CPO who add no strategic value. Mid-level management is unqualified and unavailable, incapable of basic sourcing or stakeholder engagement, yet quick to retaliate when questioned. Employees are routinely ignored, overruled, or punished for raising valid concerns.
The culture is toxic and performative. Leaders claim to have "open doors" but are dismissive and rude when approached. People who challenge process inefficiencies or conflicts of interest are marginalized. There were even unprofessional comments made by management about employees’ race and physical appearance that went unchecked. The result is a hostile, fear-driven environment where people stop speaking up.
Workload and resourcing are completely mismanaged. Many employees and contractors have almost no real work to do, while leadership spins meaningless "accountability" metrics to justify their existence. Offsites and "all hands" meetings cost thousands of dollars but produce no measurable outcomes. Money is wasted constantly on vanity initiatives and outside consulting firms, some of which have clear connections to current leaders, while internal talent sits idle.
Processes are so over-engineered that Procurement has become a bottleneck rather than an enabler. Business partners are forced through layers of bureaucracy to get basic work done. If there is no ticket, there is no help, even if the business is desperate for support.