Pros
Medical benefit options, stocks, usually off on holidays.
Cons
Lengthy interview process followed by a very limited relocation package.
The role requires extensive travel, leaving you home only a few days each month.
This was the most controlling and micromanaged work environment I have experienced. Management exercised extreme oversight of daily work, including constant monitoring, mandatory attendance in your meetings for “visibility,” heavy interrogations about what you said during your mandatory and supposedly private feedback sessions with HR or directors, and frequent one-on-one sessions focused primarily on criticism rather than development. Boundaries between personal time and work time were not respected, and public humiliation was used as a management tactic.
Interaction with peers was actively discouraged. Autonomy was effectively nonexistent, and the role functioned more as an extension of management rather than an independent professional position.
Advancement or trust appeared contingent on total personal alignment with leadership rather than performance or expertise.
The culture strongly expects the job to become your entire life. Any indication that family or personal commitments take priority places you outside the inner circle. The position appears structured to absorb blame and shield leadership when projects or initiatives fail, rather than to empower success.
There were repeated instances of intrusive behavior, including pressure to disclose private personal information and excessive monitoring outside of normal working hours. Travel policies were restrictive and enforced in ways that limited independence and created unnecessary stress. Schedules were subject to frequent last-minute changes, making basic personal logistics difficult to manage.
The vehicle program was presented as a benefit but operated more as a mechanism for control. Personal use, routine expenses, and travel behavior were closely scrutinized despite the vehicle being partially employee-funded.
Last-minute travel demands were common, often requiring long drives on short notice. Expressing hesitation or concern was not well received.
Overall, the environment was characterized by constant criticism, accusations, and a complete lack of trust. Although described as a hybrid role, flexibility for WFH was not supported.
Finally, this is not a true reliability role. Much of the work does not involve reliability engineering, data analysis, RCM, or coaching maintenance teams. Instead, responsibilities focus on surface-level inspections and non-technical tasks, with limited opportunity to practice or develop core reliability competencies.