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What Penelope Trunk's Chief critique reveals — and where she's right vs wrong

👁 0 views📖 1,259 words⏱ 6 min read5/26/2026

Direct Answer

Penelope Trunk — a long-running career-advice blogger and LinkedIn essayist — published two of the most aggressive public critiques of Chief that exist on the open internet: a July 2023 blog post titled "The Barbie movie crushes the Chief.com pyramid scheme" and a LinkedIn essay titled "Chief.com is a fraud.

Joining makes you look bad." Her core claims are that Chief's vetting is theatrical (she got an invite using a fake profile at a fake company), that the offering slid into "bait-and-switch" territory as the company scaled, and that the entire premise — paid peer-networking for women executives — sells status rather than substance.

Some of her critiques map cleanly onto documented member complaints reported by Fortune and onto the company's own 2023 restructuring (two rounds of layoffs, a shuttered UK expansion). Others — most notably the "fraud" and "pyramid scheme" framings — are her opinion, dressed in punchy rhetoric, and are not supported by the kind of evidence those words normally require.

The essays are worth reading as the most public unfiltered Chief critique on the record, even if not every line is verifiable.

flowchart TD A[Penelope Trunk's Chief Critiques] --> B[Verifiable / Member-Aligned] A --> C[Opinion-Only / Rhetorical] B --> B1[Price vs. value mismatch] B --> B2[Core groups hit-or-miss] B --> B3[Ops not keeping up with growth] B --> B4[Vetting weaker than marketed] C --> C1["'Fraud' label"] C --> C2["'Pyramid scheme' framing"] C --> C3[All members 'look bad'] C --> C4[No successful woman needs Chief]

1. Trunk's Main Critiques

Trunk's writing is intentionally provocative, but underneath the rhetoric there are four distinct claims worth separating. First, she argues the vetting is theater: she says she created a fake LinkedIn profile with a fabricated title at a non-existent company and received a Chief invitation through automated outbound, which she presents as evidence that the "exclusive, vetted senior-executive network" pitch does not match the operational reality.

Second, she argues the business model is bait-and-switch: members are sold an elite peer circle and end up with what she characterizes as generic content, oversized cohorts, and Slack-style chatter that any LinkedIn group provides for free. She explicitly draws a parallel to LuLaRoe, writing that "if LuLaRoe is the pyramid for women who quit their jobs, Chief is the pyramid for women before they quit."

Third, she argues Chief sells status, not substance. Her claim is that the actual product women are buying is the Chief pin, the logo on a bio, and the implicit social signal — and that the underlying coaching and peer-group experience is downstream of, and weaker than, the brand wrapper.

Fourth — and most cited by her detractors — she argues that no genuinely successful woman needs Chief, leaning on labor economist Claudia Goldin's research on greedy work and career ceilings to argue that the women who would benefit from Chief's stated mission are not the women who can write the check, and the women who can write the check do not need what Chief actually delivers.

It is worth being clear about what Trunk is and is not. She is a career-advice blogger and serial founder with a deliberately combative voice; she is not an investigative journalist, she did not interview Chief executives on the record, and her "fake profile" test is a sample size of one.

Her essays are opinion plus one personal experiment, not a reported investigation. Treating them as the latter is a category error in either direction.

2. Where the Critiques Align With Other Reporting

Several of Trunk's claims are not novel to her. Fortune's March 2023 feature on Chief surfaced sustained member complaints that the company's rapid scaling had outpaced its operations: Core groups described as patchy, customer-service emails going unanswered, and senior members questioning whether the network still matched the pitch that justified the roughly $5,800 to $8,900 annual fee.

The Wikipedia entry on Chief preserves a summary of that Fortune reporting and notes additional criticism around diversity representation. Yahoo Finance's syndication of the same reporting carried the line that "some members say the club isn't living up to the hype" directly in its headline.

The operational story tracks too. TechCrunch reported that Chief cut roughly 14% of staff in April 2023, with a second reduction in October 2023, and that the UK expansion was shut down. Inc.

Has since covered a CEO transition. None of that proves Trunk's strongest framings, but it does establish that the underlying friction she pointed at — scale outrunning quality, member-experience variance, business-model strain — was visible to mainstream business press at roughly the same time her essays appeared.

On vetting specifically, Trunk's fake-profile anecdote is unverified by outside parties, but it rhymes with widely shared member observations on LinkedIn that the "senior-executive only" framing has loosened as the waitlist grew past 60,000 and revenue pressure increased. So while Trunk is the loudest voice, she is not a lone voice — she is the unfiltered version of complaints that more cautious outlets reported in softer language.

3. Where Trunk Overreaches

The two words doing the most work in Trunk's essays are "fraud" and "pyramid scheme," and both are stretched well past their normal meaning. Fraud is a legal term that requires intentional misrepresentation causing measurable harm; there is no public regulatory action, no class action, and no evidence that Chief misrepresented its corporate structure or financials.

A product that under-delivers versus its marketing — which is the strongest reading of the member complaints — is disappointing, possibly even deceptive marketing, but it is not fraud in any operative sense.

The "pyramid scheme" framing is even shakier. Pyramid schemes require participants to be compensated primarily for recruiting other participants rather than for selling a product to end users. Chief members are not paid to recruit other members; they pay a flat membership fee and receive a service.

Trunk uses the term metaphorically — a status hierarchy where the people at the top benefit from the people at the bottom — but that metaphor applies to nearly every membership organization, alumni network, or country club. Calling it a "pyramid scheme" is rhetorically vivid and analytically loose.

Her flat claim that joining Chief "makes you look bad" and that no successful woman needs it is also opinion delivered as fact. Plenty of accomplished women report genuine value from their Core groups; Trunk's framing leaves no room for that variance.

flowchart TD T[Trunk's Essays] --> R[Reasonable Read] T --> O[Overreach] R --> R1[Question the pricing] R --> R2[Question the vetting] R --> R3[Question scale vs. quality] O --> O1[Calling it 'fraud'] O --> O2[Calling it 'pyramid scheme'] O --> O3[Dismissing all member value] R1 --> V[Verified by Fortune, Wikipedia, members] O1 --> N[No legal or regulatory basis]

FAQ

Q: Is Penelope Trunk a credible source on Chief? A: She is a credible opinion writer with a long track record of contrarian career writing, but she is not an investigative reporter and her essays are clearly labeled as commentary. Read her as the loudest skeptic, not the final word.

Q: Did Chief ever respond publicly to Trunk? A: There is no public record of Chief responding to Trunk's essays by name. The company has addressed the broader Fortune reporting in member communications and through leadership changes, but Trunk's pieces sit in the unanswered-critic category.

Q: Should her essays change a prospective member's decision? A: They should at minimum be read alongside the Fortune article and current member reviews before writing the check. Treat them as one data point in a triangulation, not as a verdict.

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