Pros
Benefits tied to parent company AIA, Some dedicated and talented individuals at the peer level who work hard despite the challenges.
Cons
There is a consistent and debilitating lack of clear direction from the top. Executive priorities shift constantly without clear communication, leading to wasted effort, abandoned projects, and immense frustration. This makes it impossible to deliver meaningful outcomes or have pride in your work. Despite the lack of high-level strategy, there is a pervasive culture of micromanagement that stifles innovation and autonomy. This suggests a deep lack of trust in employees and prevents teams from working efficiently. Culture of Favoritism, Not Meritocracy: Rewards, recognition, and opportunities for advancement are not based on merit or the quality of one's work. Instead, they are disproportionately given to a select in-group based on personal relationships. This demoralizes high performers who see their contributions go unnoticed while others are promoted. Toxic Politics Over Product Focus: The internal environment feels overly politicized. Energy is spent on navigating complex internal dynamics and building the right alliances rather than on collaborating to build a great product for customers. Decision-making appears to be influenced by relationships rather than what is best for the business. Chronic Underappreciation: Employees who are actually building and delivering the product are consistently undervalued. Hard work is expected as the baseline and rarely acknowledged, leading to widespread burnout and disengagement.