Do you like being micromanaged? Expected to do 4 disparate jobs under one weird title? Working with too many cooks in the kitchen? Working somewhere that innovation is frowned upon? Then Human8 is the place for you! There is no autonomy, asynchronous collaboration doesn’t exist, and project teams are at the whim of account managers/OS’s instead of project managers. There’s no clear delineation of work for project managers and assistant project managers. Unless you’ve risen up through the ranks here, no one takes you seriously. Projects are scoped by people who don’t deliver them… so you’re thrown into something you haven’t helped create, usually with an unrealistic deadline, and expected to just make it work. Instead of working in qualtrics, tableau, or any other system that would translate to somewhere outside of Gongos, you need to learn their strange internally built system that is anything but intuitive. No annual raises, not even meager 1-3% loyalty or cost of living adjustments. The people who’ve been here 20 years only stay because they’d be laughed out of the room if they took this sort of behavior to any sort of formidable research agency or corporate company. Every time I personally have made a suggestion, whether for something small like a report input or larger like best practices from previous roles (which I was encouraged to share during the interview process, because they “ LOVED that kind of stuff “), it has been shot down, so I no longer try to add anything of value. What a great mentality for employees to have! I’ve never worked in a role where I had to ask permission for every little thing project related (can I send this for review? can I edit this content?), either because OS’s refuse to give up control or because I haven’t spent 15 years here, or both. If you work quickly and finish all your work early, instead of being able to hop out of the day early you’re expected to ask around and fill in your hours doing other people’s work. Same goes with tile sheets, if you log 50 hours one week and only 35 hours the next, you’re reprimanded for only doing 30 hours even though no one thanked you for giving up your free time the week before.