Pros
* Direct client exposure and opportunity to understand clients
Cons
1. A number of leadership roles seem to be occupied by individuals who don’t have strong people-management or leadership experience, which often leads to weak decision-making, unclear direction, and limited accountability.
2. Senior management often appears disconnected from both client expectations and day-to-day operational realities, which results in avoidable issues being passed down to employees.
3. There is a strong tendency to prioritize clients at all costs, even in situations where the client may be wrong. This often leaves employees carrying responsibility for issues they didn’t create.
4. Situations are frequently assessed without a full review of employee input or a proper understanding of the actual work done, leading to one-sided conclusions.
5. The workplace environment often feels overly monitored and based on mistrust, where employees feel observed, encouraged to report on each other, or caught in internal gossip cycles instead of open, direct communication.
6. HR policies and disciplinary actions do not appear to be applied consistently. Similar cases can result in very different outcomes depending on the person involved, which creates a sense of unfairness.
7. Employee feedback does not seem to translate into meaningful action, which reduces confidence in whether internal concerns are genuinely heard or addressed.
8. Career growth and salary progression are quite limited. Even as workload and client expectations increase, recognition and financial progression often do not match.
9. Long-term commitment and loyalty don’t appear to carry much weight, and employees can feel easily replaceable regardless of performance or contribution.
10. Overall, the work culture feels heavily influenced by internal politics, with less emphasis on fairness, transparency, or employee development.