Pros
1. Timely Salary: You will always receive your salary on the promised date, which is a definite plus. 2. Annual Tour: The company does organize an annual trip, which is a nice gesture for team bonding. 3. Some Great Colleagues: I was fortunate to work with a few genuinely talented and supportive teammates and seniors. They were the best part of the job.
Cons
1. Zero Work-Life Balance: ------------------------- This isn't an exaggeration—it's zero. Official hours start at 8:00 AM, but HR explicitly stated that we must be logged in by 7:50 AM or be marked absent for the entire day. While the day starts early, it never ends on time. Regularly leaving between 7:30 PM and 8:00 PM was the norm. The culture is worsened by a few individuals who stay excessively late to gain favor with upper management. Leadership would verbally tell us to leave at 5:30 PM, but then pile on an impossible amount of work with completely unrealistic deadlines. There seems to be an expectation that employees are workaholic machines with no life outside the company. Weekend work calls were common, and we were often forced to work on our off days. 2. Unprofessional Increment Process and Increased Workload: ---------------------------------------------------------- The company policy promises a half-yearly increment. However, unlike most companies that offer raises to mitigate inflation, here you have to fight for it. You are subjected to nonsensical lectures during the negotiation process. Even if you are lucky enough to get a raise, it comes with a massive, disproportionate increase in your workload. The expectation is that you will become a multi-role resource—doing testing, updating requirements, and even being asked to code, all while your already late clock-out time shifts from 7-8 PM to 9-10 PM. Furthermore, those who are skilled at office politics and buttering up management often receive hidden appraisals. 3. Micromanagement and Surveillance: -------------------------------------- The company uses a monitoring application that acts like a time bomb over your head. It measures your inactive status. If you are away from your desk for even a few minutes—whether for a short break or a personal emergency—it is tracked and held against you. The company demands a full 8 hours of active "click time," excluding breaks, which is completely unrealistic. Everyone knows the productive time in an 8-9 hour day is realistically 4-5 hours, but this company refuses to acknowledge that basic fact. 4. No Strategic Direction: ------------------------ Upper management lacks a clear vision. They would assign a task one day and then do a complete 180-degree change the next, demanding it be completed by the original deadline. There is no proper planning or coherent product strategy, leading to chaotic development cycles. 5. Punished for Leaving Even Slightly Late: ----------------------------------------- Although the official office hours are 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM, the reality is completely contradictory. Even when someone clocks out at 5:30, 6:00, or 6:30 PM due to a personal emergency, the CEO and management immediately target them. They act as if leaving anywhere near the official time is a performance issue. Employees are made to feel guilty and are lectured as though they’re causing massive disruptions. Instead of acknowledging emergencies or respecting personal boundaries, management almost “aims a sniper” at anyone who dares to leave close to the actual end of the workday. 6. Chaotic, Joyless Work Environment: ------------------------------------- There is absolutely no sense of work enjoyment or professional fulfillment. The workflow functions like a never-ending pile of garbage being dumped on your desk. You’re given one task, then midway through it, another urgent task is thrown at you, and before you can finish that, yet another one is added. This cycle continues endlessly with zero prioritization, zero planning, and zero respect for the employee’s mental bandwidth. The environment is not just stressful—it is genuinely insane and toxic, leaving no room for creativity, learning, or even basic satisfaction from completing meaningful work.