Pros
The healthcare packages and 401(k) match are decent and competitive and base pay is typically mildly competitive for the industry. There are some genuinely smart, talented, and nice people working at the contributor level who make the day-to-day bearable. It can be a decent place to gain experience, provided you understand you may need to look elsewhere to learn true industry best practices.
Cons
At the core, many of the company's issues can be linked to the extreme lack of psychological safety. The culture at EWS heavily rewards optics and perception over actual performance. If you provide data-driven, constructive feedback that is not 100% aligned with management's preference, you are painted as problematic. Promotions and recognition frequently go to "yes-men" who align with leadership's personal preferences rather than those who drive measurable results. Decisions by senior leaders are often driven by executive preference rather than data or best practices. This lack of accountability filters down to middle management, where leaders often shift blame to their subordinate teams instead of taking ownership of outcomes that they specifically requested. Their "hybrid" 3-day in-office policy is draining. Employees are required to commute to the office, just to sit on Zoom calls all day because other employees and partners are all over the country. Additionally, there is a clear bias against the Scottsdale office with often overheard "whispers" that the New York office is the "real" headquarters. For the day to day work, bureaucracy is inescapable. For some projects, standard approvals can take literal years to process. This, combined with a culture of false urgency, frequent re-orgs, and frivolous budgets that require constant re-adjusting lead to quick burnout. And even though management publicly advocates for work-life balance, they not-so-secretly expect near-24/7 responsiveness, causing confusion and conflict between teams. To top it all off, the inequity across teams is glaringly obvious. Resource distribution is highly uneven. Some departments enjoy massive budgets for casual events, while other teams cant get $50 approved for a retirement celebration. To put it as simply as possible: if you care about your work, stay away. If you’re a high performer who thrives on logic, stay away. The mental gymnastics required to make it through each day are exhausting. Navigating constant fabricated urgency, sensitive egos, contradictory objectives, and corporate subtext will drain your energy within months. The only coping mechanism to survive is to simply stop caring, which is a massive red flag for anyone who actually takes pride in their work.