Pros
NRP pays well for the market (this is slowly changing) — solid base salary, strong quarterly bonus structure, and one of the highest car allowances in the industry. The benefits are standard for a large company, On the project level you CAN land on a good team and really enjoy the construction "in the trenches" activities so long as your project team are all on the same page. On Paper - culture and values are excellent
Cons
Construction department culture is extremely structured and heavily micromanaged. The SOP system feels more like a control tool than a support guide — it adds layers of busywork and “CYA” documentation that don’t actually move the job forward. They preach not to ‘pencil whip,’ yet get frustrated when you take the time to do procedures the right way. Field leadership has very little autonomy, and even seasoned supers are often treated as if they can’t make basic decisions without corporate or executive approval, which makes you feel like a disposable cog in the machine. Management often claims they only step in when things “go sideways,” but in practice, that can mean any normal project hiccup. When that happens, accountability tends to roll downhill, especially if the project team isn’t strong. Career growth beyond Superintendent is limited unless you fully buy into the corporate playbook — and with leadership turnover at higher levels, it doesn’t look like that culture is changing anytime soon.