Pros
FINE is probably a decent company for those who are far along in their careers — competitive pay, mostly professional and optimistic culture, and nice people working at the top of their game. The health insurance benefits are top notch (although PTO is a bit stingy in my opinion) and they are great at the little things — excellent office snacks, employee outings, birthday gifts, and more. As far as I could see, the good work/life balance was real for many people.
Cons
There is a dearth of people-management skills at FINE, and many of the senior people are super busy and disinterested in offering guidance or explaining what is going on to entry and midlevel employees. The positivity at FINE can often cross the line into toxic positivity. Everyone seems so happy go lucky at meetings but when I reached out one-on-one with other midlevel employees, it revealed underlying stress. Lack of transparency and effective people-management is making it a challenge for employees to successfully contribute their best work. Many are afraid to say when they are confused or flailing because everyone talks about nothing but how great everything is. It doesn't help that a lot of roles are pretty siloed, making people isolated. At one point, a high-level person at the company told me that several people who were let go in the previous six months were promised training and didn't get it. FINE brought them on with no development plan and no one had time to actually guide them. Therefore, all these employees were set up for failure and were inevitably let go after treading water for 3-9 months. The time two women of color were laid off at the same time was especially troublesome. Though I didn't have close insight into what happened it really bothered me. Some teams are better in this regard than others — the traction team is especially guilty. I'm sorry, but letting go about half of your new hires in less than a year is a huge red flag of a dysfunctional team without a clear plan or vision. It's just wrong to blame the employees you let go for that. It's also worth noting that payroll/benefits management seems to be bungled on a regular basis, at least in my experience.