Pros
Two stars total: one for food, snacks, and the office space; one for compensation.
Cons
The back office exhibits recurring leadership failures across multiple functions. In finance and accounting, management practices are frequently punitive and unprofessional. In some areas, interpersonal conduct that would typically warrant managerial intervention is not only tolerated but embedded in the culture, where it can appear normalized and, at times, implicitly rewarded. The admin team is poorly led, ethically questionable, and performative, with hiring often concentrated within a narrow circle of familiar personal networks, and its presence widely regarded internally as disruptive, insular, and self-reinforcing. Within facilities, the dynamic is uneven: some roles are marked by visible posturing and self-importance, while others appear defined by excessive deference to management and a readiness to relay all concerns and observations upward -- behavior once charitably attributed to inexperience but now more widely understood as a willingness to subordinate independent professional judgement in favor of visible loyalty. In practice, this dynamic reinforces the authority of a manager widely regarded internally as problematic. IT support demonstrates its own leadership deficiencies, further degrading cross-team effectiveness. In aggregate, these conditions enable inequitable treatment and inappropriate behavior, introduce operational friction, degrade performance, undermine morale, and contribute to an environment where safety is uneven at best. There is a clear gap between the firm's ethical and dignified self-image and the conduct it permits internally.