Pros
The strongest part of my experience was the people on the team. My coworkers were hardworking, knowledgeable, and genuinely cared about doing the job well. Some members of middle management were also caring individuals who tried to support their teams within a difficult structure. The company offered solid benefits, exposure to complex AR work, and opportunities to learn multiple systems and processes. From a technical standpoint, the role gave me experience with high-volume AR, customer account research, dispute resolution, reconciliations, ERP systems, and the realities of working in a large corporate environment.
Cons
The AR department suffered from leadership instability, weak structure, poor transparency, and inconsistent follow-through. Concerns were raised repeatedly through various channels, but meaningful operational correction rarely followed. There was a persistent pattern of meetings, refreshers, and retraining that never addressed the deeper issues: workload, staffing, process ownership, accountability, and department stability. The department was difficult to work in because the company often became its own obstacle. Collectors were expected to manage high-volume portfolios, customer disputes, reconciliations, internal research, and downstream issues, all while absorbing additional work when people left. Backfills and permanent staffing support were slow or uncertain, and the company appeared comfortable leaning on contractors rather than building long-term stability. There was also a noticeable imbalance in how different parts of AR were supported. Collectors often carried the burden of unresolved process issues, while upstream errors created additional work with little accountability or relief. Customers, internal partners, and AR employees alike recognized that the department felt disorganized. Performance metrics and department expectations became harder to trust because the environment itself was unstable. The issue was not that employees did not want accountability. The issue was that accountability requires a stable structure, clear ownership, fair workload distribution, and leadership that follows through. The company had talented people, but it did not protect institutional knowledge well. Employees who understood the systems, customers, disputes, and account history were often the ones holding the department together informally. When an organization fails to recognize that kind of value, the department becomes more fragile than leadership may realize.