Pros
The people at the office are wonderful to work with—everyone is kind and supportive. The location is also fantastic. After a year at SCS Global, there's a steady flow of work and plenty of interesting projects to get involved in
Cons
If you're a new hire and raise a concern, there's a strong chance you'll be let go rather than heard. Resolving the issue is often seen as more costly than simply replacing you, especially during the first year of employment when internal transfers aren't an option. I was hired to support the role of a supervisor who had recently been promoted to manager. Unfortunately, this individual turned out to be the most controlling micromanager I’ve ever worked with. While I genuinely enjoyed working at SCS Global and appreciated the company overall, my direct supervisor made the experience deeply uncomfortable. She micromanaged every detail—down to the color of the highlights I used in emails and how many rings I should allow before answering a Teams call. She copied me on every single one of her emails in case she was out of office, which meant my inbox was constantly flooded. Beyond the micromanagement, she disregarded basic work boundaries. She repeatedly told me that I was being paid based on project delivery, not hourly work, and would routinely assign tasks just before the end of my shift, expecting immediate turnaround. Worse still, she had no clear performance expectations or direction for the role—something typical of micromanagers who focus on minutiae but fail to provide a strategic overview. When I raised my concerns with her supervisor, I was initially promised support and a resolution. Instead, within a week, I was summoned to an HR meeting where I was told I wasn’t a good fit for the team. That same day was marked as my last. I had just relocated from another state to California for this position. Being so new, I wasn’t eligible for unemployment benefits in CA—leaving me in an incredibly difficult and vulnerable position.