Pros
* Opportunity to work with talented colleagues across many service lines and business units. * Employees are often given significant responsibility and exposure to complex business challenges. * There are pockets of excellent leadership and many people throughout the organization who genuinely care about clients and their teams.
Cons
The company often promotes itself as an entrepreneurial, people-first organization, but many employees experience a highly centralized and financially driven culture. * Work-life balance can be challenging. I experienced extended periods (months) of mandatory overtime (including around the holidays for year end) and was punished for taking time off due to business demands and staffing constraints. * Leadership has publicly emphasized margin expansion, and employees frequently feel the impact through incentive changes, cost controls, increased workloads, and periodic workforce reductions. * Layoffs and reorganizations create recurring uncertainty, including in functions not directly tied to seasonal tax work. * Career progression can be difficult to navigate due to shifting priorities, organizational changes, and inconsistent leadership expectations. * I observed situations where external candidates were actively recruited into roles only to exit the organization within months, raising concerns about hiring alignment, onboarding, and expectation setting. * Employees in regional markets may feel increasingly disconnected from executive leadership and strategic decision-making. * Organizational politics and executive visibility can sometimes appear to carry as much weight as measurable performance outcomes.