The organization leveraged UST Global's workforce, particularly in India and other offshore locations, to reduce costs through a managed service provider model. There appeared to be a systematic approach of having US-based employees transfer knowledge and train offshore replacements. Leadership messaging suggested they wanted to retain strategic thinkers domestically while having offshore personnel handle operational tasks.
Different employment policies existed for UST Global employees versus subsidiary staff. UST HP employees faced immediate termination upon layoff, while parent company employees received transition periods and internal job placement assistance before eventual separation if no position was found.
The workplace dynamics were complex, involving various employee categories with different motivations and constraints - long-term domestic employees who had built systems and products, visa-dependent workers facing relocation pressures, and offshore personnel measured against metrics that sometimes encouraged task deflection. Navigating relationships with leaders across different locations who appeared focused on expanding their organizational influence was an ongoing challenge.
Despite having a significant workforce from India, the organization's treatment of Indian employees working in US offices was notably poor.