Pros
Only for my team Excellent for New Graduates: A perfect environment for fresh graduates to start their careers. It serves as a great "training ground" for the first 1-2 years. Comprehensive SDLC Exposure: You get strong opportunities to learn the full Software Development Life Cycle, gaining solid experience in both product management and hands-on development. Supportive Team Culture: Colleagues are friendly, easy to get along with, and genuinely helpful. There is a strong culture of knowledge sharing and mentorship. Solid Foundation: It is a good place to build a firm technical foundation and transition from a student mindset to a professional software engineer.
Cons
Only for my team Outdated Tech Stack: The technologies used are old and lack innovation. In today's highly competitive market, working here for too long limits your future career options and competitiveness. Low Compensation: The salary is below market rate, and the benefits package is poor. Style Over Substance: The company favors "talkers" and those who can "sweet-talk" clients over engineers who actually solve technical problems. Technical excellence is often ignored. Unfair Workload & Burnout: Competent engineers are forced to "carry" colleagues who are good at talking but weak at coding. You end up doing your own work plus fixing their mistakes. Hiring Priorities: This lowers the hiring bar, leading to a team where many struggle with the basics. Poor Engineering Quality: Due to the lack of technical rigor, the codebase suffers from redundancy and poor system design ("spaghetti code"). Inefficiency: Meetings take up the majority of the day, leaving little time for deep work, which causes severe project delays. Even PTO notifications have to be talked about for half an hour to 1 hour, that is because developers cannot be self-driven and don't have ownership, which means that everything should be documented and ruled into norms.