The environment is chaotic, disorganized, and driven by constant urgency with no structure behind it. Communication between teams is practically nonexistent, and leadership operates in a way that feels more reactive than intentional. You’re often given large amounts of work with no clear prioritization, timeline, or support, followed by repeated apologies instead of actual change.
Micromanagement is extreme. There is a strong culture of surveillance around meetings and visibility rather than trust or outcomes. It creates anxiety rather than productivity. Professionalism at the leadership level is inconsistent, and interactions can feel disrespectful or intimidating rather than collaborative.
Turnover is constant. Layoffs happen, and the remaining workload simply shifts onto whoever is left. Expectations do not adjust, resources do not increase, and compensation rarely reflects the added burden. Many people quietly burn out.
Work-life balance is essentially nonexistent. Long days, no breaks, late nights, and weekend work become normalized just to keep up with administrative load and shifting priorities. Promised earnings or growth targets often become unrealistic due to ongoing internal changes.
There are good individuals here, talented, kind people trying their best, but the system they’re operating in makes sustainable success nearly impossible. Most employees I’ve interacted with are actively trying to leave.
If you’re truly desperate for a role, you may tolerate it for a time. But if you value stability, mental health, or realistic workload expectations, I strongly recommend looking elsewhere.