Pros
Pexapark operates in one of the most interesting and strategically important sectors in Europe right now — the energy transition, renewable PPAs and battery storage. The company has built genuine market credibility in a complex niche and there are many highly intelligent, motivated and mission-driven people across the business. The level of industry expertise internally is strong, particularly within analytics, advisory and parts of the commercial organisation. Employees are generally collaborative, international and passionate about the sector. There is meaningful exposure to senior market participants across utilities, IPPs, traders, corporates and investors, which creates excellent learning opportunities. The company also offers flexibility, remote working and exposure to a fast-evolving market that is likely to remain highly relevant over the coming decade.
Cons
The business increasingly feels caught between two identities: a long-term data/intelligence platform business versus a short-term operational growth story. This creates frequent strategic shifts, changing priorities and uncertainty around direction. There is a tendency toward reactive restructuring rather than building sustainable operating foundations. Decision-making and accountability can become unclear, particularly during periods of organisational change. Teams are often asked to adapt quickly to new structures without sufficient communication or alignment on ownership, incentives or long-term strategy. Several functions appear under-resourced relative to expectations, which creates pressure on individuals and contributes to fatigue and turnover. In some areas, commercial strategy also feels inconsistent — moving between enterprise growth ambitions and short-term revenue pressures without a fully coherent execution model. At its best, Pexapark is a smart, ambitious and genuinely innovative company with excellent people. However, the organisation would benefit significantly from greater strategic consistency, clearer leadership communication and more stable operational structures.