Pros
For engineers who want exposure to identity governance technologies, the company can offer valuable hands-on experience. However, those looking for long-term program stability, consistent leadership direction, and predictable career progression may want to ask detailed questions about project continuity, stakeholder relationships, and performance evaluation processes before joining.
Cons
I worked at New River Systems for several years in an Identity and Access Governance role supporting Saviynt and enterprise IAM implementations in federal environments. The technical work itself can be valuable, particularly for engineers who want hands-on experience with identity governance systems, integrations, and complex security environments. However, candidates considering joining should carefully evaluate program stability and leadership alignment before making a long-term commitment. During my time there, some programs experienced instability due to challenges with stakeholder management and delivery alignment. In more than one situation, contracts transitioned away from the company after ongoing concerns from stakeholders about execution andcommunication. These transitions had significant impact on engineering teams. Staff were frequently asked to pivot quickly to new responsibilities and technologies with limited transition planning. While learning new tools can be beneficial, the pace and circumstances sometimes felt reactive rather than part of a strategic development plan.