Capital One Canada has very little real strategic substance. Most employees don’t actually know what the company is trying to achieve. The default operating model seems to be: wait for the U.S. to decide something, then lift‑and‑shift it into Canada. Processes, tools, and applications built for the U.S. are copied over with almost no adaptation or consideration for the Canadian context.
Senior leadership often comes across as rude, avoidant, and heavily influenced by favoritism. Employee feedback is routinely ignored, and decisions frequently contradict the concerns raised by staff. The culture has become one where people feel they have to fend for themselves rather than collaborate.
Technology teams, in particular, struggle with alignment, cohesion, and delivery. Collaboration is limited, and the environment feels fragmented. A small group of senior leaders — the same two to three people who have controlled everything for years, including the infamous “Double D” duo — continue to dominate decisions and shape the culture, creating bottlenecks and reinforcing the same unhealthy patterns.
Many employees describe the environment as toxic, with recurring reports of bullying, intimidation, and exclusion. Performance management is deeply influenced by favoritism; if you’re not in the preferred circle, you’re at a disadvantage from the start. The rest are essentially written off.
Meanwhile, the company continues to operate with essentially one core credit card product, yet claims to be short another 400 people in tech — which feels more like empire‑building than strategic necessity.
Overall, the workplace culture is demoralizing. It’s hard to remember the last time teams genuinely celebrated an achievement or felt proud of what they delivered. The environment feels stagnant, political, and disconnected from the needs of employees.