Pros
Salary comes on time every month
Cons
The organization runs on a culture of control rather than trust. Employees are expected to be “available” at very specific times as if attendance monitoring is the ultimate productivity metric. It often feels less like a professional workplace and more like a system built around surveillance. Leadership lacks clarity of direction. Priorities change frequently, planning is minimal, and teams are left scrambling to execute even basic tasks. What should be straightforward processes often turn into chaotic exercises in coordination because there is little structural maturity in how work is managed. Internal politics are deeply embedded in the culture. Visibility and loyalty to the right people seem to matter far more than competence or original thinking. Those who are comfortable agreeing with leadership tend to do well, while people with fresh ideas or a more independent mindset are often viewed as “difficult.” The HR function, which should ideally drive culture and structure, feels largely transactional and reactive. There is limited strategic thinking, and surprisingly basic work often appears to rely on external tools rather than internal capability. Overall, the environment can feel uninspiring and unnecessarily complicated, especially for people who are motivated to build, improve systems, or think creatively.