Pros
1. Flexible work schedule - plan around family and personal obligations/choose your own schedule 2. 9/80 schedule 3. Work from home on working Fridays and severe weather days 4. Remote work at your discretion to accommodate personal obligations 5. Specialized certifications paid for by the company 6. Free ISM membership 7. Free CPSM certification course and materials 8. Free PMP certification course and materials 9. Reimbursement for annual gym membership or home gym 10. Supportive leadership - promotes advancement into outside roles such as Program Management and training opportunities to advance skills, 11. 2x hourly salary can be approved, if requested by the employee during times of heavy workload exceeding standard work hours - requests can be made at any time the employee has worked over 44 hours per week. 12. 9% minimum raise per year, more depending on contributions 13. No minimum time in service requirement before advancing to a new position (i.e., a new subcontracts administrator is eligible to apply to any job, at any time, and receive and accept an offer to change positions without penalty) 14. Ability to request a raise at ANY TIME - no restrictions based on start date or annual raises! 15. Offers full relocation reimbursement, including all expenses paid 16. Generous allowance for employee resource group activities 17. Generous allowance for company/work clothing
Cons
1. Lacking professionally trained and educated management and C-suite employees across the supply chain umbrella, which at times results in poor decision-making and deflection of responsibilities 2. Rapid policy changes 3. Overabundance of meetings, which can cause hours lost to matters that could have been handled via email 4. Expectations that you will cover your work on vacation or international travels, regardless of time zone 5. Difficult program team members who tend to offload support tasks, which should be allocated to assistant-type roles or engineering staff 6. Salaried role = managers will expect you to work long days if the activities that day require such input. A 15-hour day or 60-80-hour work week is expected during full-rate production or prototype phases, to meet workload. (Note: during heavy work periods, additional pay can be approved; 2x hourly salary will be approved by management, if requested by the employee)