Pros
None that I experienced at my time here.
Cons
Area Ten was by far the worst onboarding and professional experience I have ever had, and easily one of the more toxic management environments I've encountered in my career.
No structured onboarding. No documentation. No introductions for the first 2-3 business days, capacity and workload cited as reasons. No internal meetings with other staff, no run downs on delivery and barely any SOPs.
Onboarding materials featured a staff member no longer at the company. Surely this is something you would update?
The organisational chart was out of date or incorrect.
Daily 1:1s were frequently rescheduled within the meeting slot itself or started late with no courtesy message. Basic professional respect costs nothing. These meetings also lacked any real substance and were clearly not prepared for.
I sent daily updates throughout my time there. I received barely any feedback and no action points in return. If you're going to require daily reporting from a new hire, the bare minimum is acknowledging it. Given the size of the team, there is no excuse for this level of disengagement from someone in a management position.
Client briefs were often a single sentence. No context, no deadline, no guidance on delivery. Only after time had passed would I be told the work was overdue, that it shouldn't take longer than 2 hours, or that "clearly there was a miscommunication."
None of this was communicated upfront. You cannot hold someone accountable to a standard you never set.
I was asked to produce client-facing work before being briefed on the client, product and delivery. Some of the feedback when creating these documents was "run it through AI." They had little to no governance of how AI was used in the business.
When I had questions regarding clients the answer was to ask someone else. That person was also a new hire.
This is now the second person to leave in under two months. A fundamental flaw in how they hire and onboard. I'd be embarrassed if this reflected my business.
The client services lead openly described themselves as a non people person, which unfortunately was reflected in the day to day management experience.