ManTech likes to say they hire professions and let them do their job. in practice, this means that you get very little input, advice, or support. This begins with the InDoc process. I've work projects where I had no idea what the chain of command was. I'm not sure how ManTech interacted with their government client, but it seems as though the relationship was toxic, so much so that even though my project had several successful Go Live's in a row, the government still preferred the former Prime who had run out of funds and basically ran the program into the ground. The ManTech University is substandard, and the ManTech Knowledge Online is disorganized, with a lot of important corporate information (like formal processes and templates) unavailable. Perhaps this is due to poor search functionality; I can't be sure. Outprocessing is really bad; I have often been unable to locate the people who are supposed to sign off on my Out-processing.