The positive aspects create a solid foundation, but they are consistently undermined by deep-rooted, systemic issues that lead to frustration and burnout.
1. Inefficient and Messy Processes: There is a severe lack of global streamlining. Processes are inconsistent, redundant, and often change without clear communication. A significant amount of time is wasted navigating internal bureaucracy instead of doing meaningful work.
2. You Must Fight for Everything (Especially Promotions): This is the most exhausting part of the culture. Excelling in your role is merely the baseline. To be promoted or even seriously recognized, you must be a constant, vocal self-advocate. Quiet excellence is systematically ignored, and managers rarely proactively champion their top performers. This creates a toxic environment of forced self-promotion.
3. Biased Leadership and Favoritism: Unfortunately, the quality of your experience is a lottery based on your manager. Favoritism is evident in some teams, directly impacting project allocations, visibility, and the fairness of career advancement opportunities.
4. Subpar and Inequitable Compensation & Benefits: The benefits package is not competitive. The most glaring issue is the low annual flexible allowance, which is significantly lower than what is offered to employees in other countries for the same roles. Combined with a lack of fair appraisals, this leads to a strong sense of being undervalued.