Pros
Mission-driven work that directly impacts patient care and global diagnostics
Strong, talented teams who genuinely care about quality and continuous improvement
Opportunities to get involved in cross-functional projects and develop broad skills
Flexible collaboration with global sites (Minnesota, China, Poland, Denmark)
Exposure to lean tools, process improvement, and quality systems
Many employees have deep technical expertise and are generous with knowledge
Good place to grow if you’re proactive and can self-lead
Cons
Frequent shifts in priorities create confusion and make long-term planning difficult
Some leadership teams lack alignment, leading to mixed directives and unclear ownership
Communication challenges across value streams slow progress and create rework
High workload on a small number of high-performing individuals, leading to burnout
Documentation systems and cross-site tools need modernization and standardization
Too much reliance on “tribal knowledge” instead of structured training
Career advancement can feel unclear without a strong sponsoring leader
Overall: