Pros
Networking on the Casino side is a good environment; The team is great and very knowledgeable, and the team's manager truly cares about you.
I guess free lunch, but who takes a lunch anymore? :-)
Cons
Networking on the Casino Side requires a Tribal Nation Gaming License for EVERY Tribal Nation gaming network you manage; I want to say at least 20 applications. Yearly, you submit yourself to multiple credit checks / background checks / family-friend reference checks. Hope your friends don't mind the constant calls from 20+ Tribal Nations. Note: This is not the company's fault. It's required if you want to manage games in a Native American Casino.
Networking on the Corporate Side (managed by a different department) has no mgmt direction. The manager told me they felt their job is for you to do their job. All well and good, I get their point. However, without having any true direction, this led to "management by abdication" not "management by delegation." To me, it appeared the Corporate Network manager either had little knowledge or no respect for Network Engineering; Probably a little of both.
Health Insurance was comparable to every other lackluster plan offered everywhere else.