Pros
strong commitment to modernizing its infrastructure and adopting new technology
Cons
• Longevity via Networking: Survival is often about "who you know." Post-merger politics mean that visibility with senior leadership and legacy-UBS alignment frequently outweigh technical merit. • Authoritarian Leadership: Management often employs a "my way or the highway" approach. Decision-making is centralized, with middle management focused on enforcing standardized global processes rather than local autonomy. • Resistance to Improvement: There is little appetite for challenging the status quo. Suggestions for improving deliverables are often dismissed in favor of "industrialization" and meeting rigid $13 billion cost-saving targets. • Stagnant Development: While training tools exist, actual career progression is slow. Roles are increasingly "trivialized" to fit global models, leaving little room for personalized growth or internal mobility. • Credit Suisse "Rifting": CS employees are reportedly targeted for displacement. As legacy IT systems are decommissioned through 2026, former CS staff often feel like "second-class citizens" facing the brunt of the layoffs. • Wellbeing Oversight: Despite corporate wellness branding, the reality is one of "burnout" and "ruthless" workloads. Mental health concerns are often secondary to the intense pressure of hitting integration milestones.