Pros
Excellent place to master office politics and learn that performance isn't always the most important skill. Great for people who enjoy surprises, as processes and guidelines change so frequently that every week feels like a new job. Helps develop adaptability because instructions given today may become completely incorrect tomorrow. Perfect environment for building resilience, patience and a very high tolerance for confusion. Teaches employees how to function on minimal sleep and maintain productivity despite unhealthy schedules. Encourages extreme efficiency during breaks, you'll discover how much can be accomplished in a few rushed minutes. If you're looking for a stable paycheck without expecting much else, the salary arrives on time - sometimes.
Cons
Overtime compensation is a constant point of concern, with employees often feeling that the extra hours worked are not properly reflected in their pay. Management frequently changes processes, creating confusion and inconsistency across teams. Communication between leadership and employees is often unclear, resulting in conflicting instructions and unrealistic expectations. Employees performing well throughout the month may still receive quality related deductions or alerts for minor issues, particularly when incentives are due. Incentive structures can feel more focused on finding reasons to disqualify employees than rewarding strong performance. Break durations are extremely restrictive and often insufficient for employees to properly recharge during long shifts. Night shifts and rotational schedules can have a significant negative impact on sleep patterns, physical health, and overall well being. Employee concerns often take far too long to be addressed, leaving staff feeling unheard and unsupported. Security within locker rooms has been a concern, with reports of personal belongings being stolen and investigations action taking an unreasonably long time. The overall culture can leave employees feeling undervalued, over-monitored and treated more as numbers than people. Career growth, employee welfare and workplace morale often appear to be lower priorities compared to operational targets and cost saving measures.