Pros
The company products and solutions are decent in the point of sale domain. You will gain skills in problem solving, Linux, scripting, and networking; reasonable pay, good colleagues but they seriously have to address how they manage their staffs!
Cons
The team is chronically understaffed and unable to meet operational demand. Talent retention is a persistent issue, with employees resign every two to three months — a clear signal of deeper problems. The team is never at full capacity, yet agents are expected to handle back-to-back technical calls across an entire 8-hour shift while simultaneously managing an ever-growing backlog of unresolved issues. Rather than addressing the root cause, management resorts to micromanagement — demanding justification for every moment spent off the queue and redirecting accountability onto individual employees. The burden of an understaffed team is quietly placed on the shoulders of those who remain, with no acknowledgment or appreciation for the extra effort being made. Instead, unrealistic expectations are imposed, and shifting rules and regulations are enforced in the name of SLA adherence — while the actual problem, inadequate headcount and hiring, goes unaddressed. The culture offers little sense of belonging or inclusion. Employees are treated as replaceable resources rather than valued contributors. Professional growth is virtually nonexistent — one-on-one meetings with team leads or managers are rare to absent, and asking questions is subtly discouraged, leaving employees feeling dismissed rather than developed. In short, this is an environment that extracts effort without investing in its people.