Pros
It's very easy to navigate
Cons
There's nothing I can think of
Pros
- Comprehensive employee benefit package, opportunities to buy significantly more, often via salary sacrifice. From buying more holiday to private medical insurance or even an the opportunity to purchase a computer or car via finance! As Benefex develops and sells employee reward and benefit software, they are hard to compete with in this area. - Strong company culture and work ethic, such as consistent quarterly updates being broadcasted across the company, helps to engage the employee in the wider interests and development of Benefex. Awards are often given in quarterly updates which helps to encourage healthy competition and hard work. - Flexibility in working options, one can work in-office, hybrid or remote depending on what works best for them. The majority of the company appears to be entirely remote which can enable expansion on a scale they may not be able to achieve in office. - Great opportunities for promotion (depending on the department) but certainly for crossing departments into new roles. There is a heavy emphasis on internal recruitment, managers are generally open-minded and supportive of internal applications, rather then territorial and possessive. Due to being involved in both technology, reward & benefit (HR) and financial services (Benefex Financial Solutions) - there are even opportunities to cross industries internally.
Cons
- Significantly lower pay compared with competitors in the reward and benefit industry. Will expect an individual with 3-4 years of experience to receive a £20-25k salary. Wages haven't risen inline with inflation despite last year's profits being £900k. - Remote work can become quite lonely, you don't really speak to your co-workers very often. The distance and strange formality of only knowing your boss via teams can make the relationship feel rather frosty. However, there are always still gems and some managers are exceptional as with all large and successful corporations. - Mixed ability to cater and support neurodivergent learning support needs. There doesn't appear to be any standard for awareness and training on how to manage neurodiversity, nor how to optimise the overlooked talents it can bring to the table. Most managers don't know where to start if neurodivergent employees are struggling, unless they have personal connections to neurodivergent employees, otherwise it can become an uphill struggle. There does still seem to be interest by management, just not the C-suite from what I've seen.
Pros
My time at Benifex was a strong and promising start compensation was competitive with market value and employee engagement was genuinely impressive. It felt like a place where energy and culture were alive, where people were heard and valued.
Cons
But growth slowly revealed its limits. Promotions often meant doing the same tasks, only with more volume, progress that felt heavier, not higher. The company shows ambition, yet struggles with scaling the business in a way that truly supports long-term growth. Efficiency, at times, feels like a quiet penalty the faster you move, the more you carry. And overtime becomes less of an exception and more of a rhythm, which feels ironic for a culture that speaks of being “People First.” We also understand the importance of accommodating visiting colleagues/superiors but being required or "encouraged" per se to report onsite daily for this when our presence is already known can feel unnecessary. They know we’re here, even without the daily reminder. And when mistakes happen, it may be more constructive to address them quietly rather than in a crowd, corrections are heard best when dignity is kept intact.
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