Professional development came with restrictive contracts. Employees were required to stay two years or repay training costs, discouraging engagement. Declining these terms was interpreted as a lack of drive, which hindered upward mobility.
Compensation was significantly below market once you understood how government contracting budgets actually worked. The gap between what roles were funded for and what employees received was substantial, with little transparency about where the excess went.
No remote work allowed — under any circumstance. Only applied to certain employees.
PTO policy was minimal, and efforts to negotiate better terms were consistently denied. Leadership and HR occasionally dismissed concerns, framing it as employees’ fault for not negotiating harder.
Cultural misalignment was a major issue. Core values were routinely preached but rarely practiced. Loyalty was expected but not earned.
Nepotism and blurred lines between contracts raised serious ethical concerns. Government-funded spaces were later associated with — or absorbed into — unrelated private business operations of the CEO’s family, without clarity or transparency.
Senior leadership was largely absent, citing commitments to other contracts. Shortly after these assurances, the company laid off a majority of staff with minimal warning.
HR professionalism was lacking. Public content posted by internal staff on company time reflected poorly on the organization — especially during sensitive periods like layoffs.
Work-life balance was performative. Advancement was tied to full-time emotional buy-in. Those who maintained boundaries were often overlooked.