Pros
- depending on the role, can be extremely fulfilling work
- good jumping-off point for career development
- lots of social opportunities
- some great colleagues and mentors
- strong avenue for building professional connections
- decent benefits
- innovative product and business model that's easy to believe in
- good if you want to clock in, check off your KPIs, hit your numbers, and clock out. not good if you care more about quality than quantity.
Cons
- underpaid, overworked; workloads are not appropriately distributed between individuals and salary is not adjusted to market value
- self-advocacy punished rather than rewarded
- feedback not received well or incorporated into future practices, CEO has surrounded himself with yes-men
- coercive drinking culture, one physically unprofessional executive to go along with it
- excessive number of people in management positions, very few real leaders within those management positions. certain managers and higher ups more focused on getting people to fall in line than encouraging productive growth. they do not want to hear feedback.
- high-stress, which comes with the legal industry
- disorganized: internal processes change frequently and rapidly, often in inefficient and unexplainable ways
- high turnover rate, quite literally feels like a revolving door. If you work here and you get a weird gut feeling bc there are always new hires coming in and someone is quitting every other week, listen to that gut feeling and get out.
- very small HR department that also oversees the entire recruitment process (for a team that is always hiring in order to replace people quitting), leaving HR stretched thin and unable to dedicate their time to real HR problems within the company
- meaningless KPIs given undue priority over KPIs with tangible ROI
- lack of recognition for achievements
- loud, ever-changing office environment
- employees treated as costs to the company rather than contributors to its mission
- unwillingness to challenge leadership has created a "yes man" problem within management
- gently nudges/guides current employees to write positive reviews of the company on Glassdoor (be wary of positive reviews)
- great place to learn what red flags to look for in a company -- if you google search "toxic workplace traits" or "workplace red flags," that's exactly what you're getting yourself into: ineffective leadership, micro-management, poor communication, unprofessional favoritism and blatant disrespect, poor work-life balance, non-inclusive, confusingly inefficient processes, gossip mill, low morale, no job security, fear-based culture, inadequate compensation, and no recognition other than an occasional crisp high-five. overall, a disappointingly unprofessional company.
- onboarding is messy and doesn't cover nearly enough to allow you to succeed
- nitpick small details to downgrade performance assessments despite numbers and colleagues saying otherwise
Everyone deserves better than to work at this company.