Pros
Competitive pay, good perks, and occasional gift packages. A lot of genuinely capable, hardworking, and good people across the business.
Cons
The company places a strong emphasis on being recognised as a great place to work, but the internal experience can feel very different depending on where you sit. The problem isn’t the workload or fast pace. Most people joining a company like this expect that. The issue is the leadership environment. Priorities shift constantly, expectations change without much warning, and feedback can be inconsistent, abrupt, or sometimes delivered publicly. You can be praised one minute and heavily criticised the next without much explanation for the shift. Despite the talk of being a flat structure, decision-making is very top-down. People are hired for their expertise but are often overridden, second-guessed, or left out of important decisions. There can also be an expectation to take on significantly more responsibility without much clarity, recognition, or follow-through around progression. There’s a noticeable in-group/out-group culture, which probably explains why reviews here are so mixed. Some employees clearly receive more trust, visibility, support, and favour than others. If you’re not in that circle, it can feel like you’re constantly being scrutinised or trying to stay on the right side of changing dynamics. Professional boundaries are not always respected. There can be an expectation to disclose or discuss personal circumstances in a work context, which is inappropriate and uncomfortable. It creates guarded communication and a real lack of psychological safety. The perks are good, but they don’t really make up for the constant tension in the environment. Over time it becomes exhausting. Stress and burnout appeared to affect a number of employees during my time there, and access to counselling or external support can become important to maintain your wellbeing while working in the environment. These issues did not feel isolated or tied to one specific period. They felt more embedded in the culture. Some employees may feel hesitant about sharing negative experiences publicly especially in an environment where external perception appears to matter a lot. Reviews here are likely mixed because experiences vary significantly depending on where you sit. If capable people repeatedly leave feeling exhausted, undervalued, or relieved to be gone, it's worth considering whether the environment is part of the problem.