Pros
Very smart, capable people who genuinely care about their work. Bell is going through a major digital transformation so there are a lot of new initiatives, projects, and opportunities to learn.
Cons
I joined Bell through the Graduate Leadership Program and at the start it felt like a great place to build a career. The exposure to big projects, the mentorship, the structure, it all seemed like a solid path toward long-term growth. But over the past year the reality has shifted quite a bit. The company is under a lot of cost pressure, and the continuous layoffs and restructures have left teams stretched thin and people understandably on edge. You start to feel it day to day. Projects move slower, timelines slip, and the teams that remain are doing their best with fewer resources. The work itself can still be interesting and challenging, but it is hard to stay motivated when morale is low and everyone feels uncertain about what is coming next. Communication from leadership often feels reactive instead of transparent, which only adds to that sense of instability. As someone who came in through the grad program, I really did expect a certain level of job security. That was part of the appeal. But a lot of us in the program were affected by layoffs this past year (including me) and it's just sad to me that the company didn’t seem to value the very people it invested so much in developing. There are still very bright and capable people here who care deeply about their work, but the constant restructuring makes it difficult to feel grounded or confident in the long term.