Pros
• Standard benefits for a mid-sized defense firm: medical, dental, and 401(k). • HR was responsive during on-boarding. • The ESOP pitch plays well in Senate hearings and PowerPoint decks.
Cons
• Pay is the weakest link. For an engineer with advanced clearances and hands-on RMF/DevSecOps skills, compensation lags well behind market. ESOP shares don’t bridge a five-figure base gap. • Already planning my exit. TMAS 2 runs through 2026, but I’m not waiting that long to move on. • Leadership messaging is vague. Lots of talk about “Evergreen” and “ownership,” but little clarity on how that translates to promotions, pay equity, or technical investment. • Public testimony doesn’t help. Watching a key executive testify before the U.S. Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions in support of ESOP legislation was impressive on the surface. But internally, it reinforced the perception that Torch is doubling down on narrative over pay and tooling. It read more like branding than benefit. • Legacy tools, modern mission. Even in cyber/RMF roles, much of the stack is outdated. “Cloud-native” and “DevSecOps” buzzwords rarely match what’s actually in place. • ESOP feels slow and unclear. Vesting is gradual, valuation is opaque, and employees have little say. Compared to other ESOPs, it’s harder to see the upside here.