Pros
401k 3% Match Supplemental Retirement employer sponsored and funded. The people you meet outside of management.
Cons
The NCC sells a very polished narrative during hiring: complete an 18-month commitment and you’ll be able to move into other roles across the organization. What they don’t clearly disclose is the existence of a “release team” process that can significantly delay internal mobility—even after you’ve received an offer. In practice, employees who have met (and exceeded) the 18-month requirement are often required to wait an additional 4–8 weeks before being released, simply because the department cannot afford to lose headcount. I’ve personally seen individuals with 2–3 years of tenure still forced to delay their start date after accepting a new role. More recently, I’ve heard of situations where employees who already started in a new department were asked to continue taking call-center calls for part of their shift to support NCC staffing shortages. This undermines the transition process and places employees in an awkward and unsustainable position. Bonuses and performance ratings (“Leading,” “Exceeding,” etc.) also feel inconsistent and heavily subjective, often appearing to reward visibility or favoritism rather than actual workload, performance, or complexity of work. Overall, this department feels poorly managed and heavily reliant on retaining people through bottlenecks rather than development. If you do join, go in with very clear eyes: have a specific exit plan, document everything, and understand that hitting 18 months does not mean you’ll be allowed to move immediately.