Pros
Strong global manufacturing presence with exposure to diverse customers and technologies
Structured processes and clear compliance to quality systems (ISO, EHS, customer standards)
Good opportunity to gain experience in high-volume, high-mix manufacturing environments
Cross-functional collaboration across engineering, planning, supply chain, and quality teams
Stable organization with established systems and standardized workflows
Learning opportunities for fresh graduates and engineers to build foundational skill
Cons
Workload can be heavy, especially during ramp-ups, shortages, or customer escalations
Decision-making can be slow due to multiple approval layers and global alignment requirements
Limited flexibility in processes; changes often require extensive justification and documentation
Work-life balance may be challenging during peak production periods
Career progression can be slow and highly dependent on management visibility and timing