Pros
There are genuinely talented and hardworking people across the company trying to keep things running despite the environment. Most positive experiences came from coworkers supporting each other, not from leadership.
Cons
Leadership culture driven by pressure, reactive decisions, and constant instability rather than sustainable planning Frequent shifts in priorities and direction with little accountability or long-term vision Employees regularly expected to absorb responsibilities far beyond their role without additional support or compensation Very little sense of job security, even for strong performers Repeated hiring pushes followed by abrupt terminations, creating the impression that employees were viewed as interchangeable rather than worth developing long term High stress environment where morale constantly fluctuated due to uncertainty and fear around layoffs or restructuring Overseas employees often appeared to be treated as significantly more disposable and less respected Internal culture frequently focused on protecting leadership narratives instead of addressing operational problems honestly Leadership regularly overpromised achievable results during sales conversations, creating unrealistic expectations for both clients and delivery teams Employees were often left trying to justify expectations or performance goals that did not align with operational reality Clients who left were frequently dismissed internally as “bad clients” rather than leadership taking accountability for unrealistic promises, poor results, or execution issues Strong culture of constant firefighting instead of building stable systems and processes Meetings and “strategy discussions” often replaced proper execution and planning Transparency from leadership was inconsistent, especially regarding staffing decisions, company direction, and internal changes Work expectations and schedules shifted over time in ways that did not always align with what employees were originally hired or contracted for Work-life balance and employee well-being often felt secondary to short-term revenue goals and constant operational pressure