Pros
You’ll Learn Resilience the Hard Way Survive here for a year, and you can probably survive anywhere. The constant pressure, the backstabbing, and the lack of support will harden you like nothing else. Paychecks Arrive on Time Yes, you get paid. But don’t mistake that for respect or value. It's compensation for surviving a daily emotional war zone. Brand Name on Resume (Until It Starts Hurting It) Having "Gallagher" on your CV might raise eyebrows—but not always in a good way. It can open doors, but seasoned professionals often know what that name means, especially in the Indian corporate scene.
Cons
Toxic Leadership and Abusive Management Managers operate with unchecked ego, no empathy, and zero leadership ability. Expect to be micromanaged, gaslit, and treated like a number—unless you're part of the inner circle. Rampant Favoritism and Dirty Office Politics Merit is irrelevant. If you’re not sucking up, you’re invisible. Promotions, awards, and even your daily work visibility depend more on your proximity to power than on your performance. Zero Work-Life Balance (Read: You're Always Working) Be ready to sacrifice evenings, weekends, and sometimes even your health. Working 10–12 hours is not an exception—it’s the baseline. Burnout is inevitable and ignored. Manipulated Appraisals and Fake Performance Ratings The rating systems are rigged. They exist only to justify the decisions already made behind closed doors. Your growth has nothing to do with your efforts. Credit Theft and Biased Project Allocation Your hard work will likely be handed off to someone else for glory. Want to lead an initiative? Better hope you're politically aligned with the right people. Discrimination and Cultural Insensitivity Subtle—but constant—biases against certain regions and backgrounds exist. Local employees often get the short end of the stick, while outsiders are favored without merit. No Real Career Path or Skill Development Unless you’re part of the favorites club, expect stagnation. Forget mentorship or learning opportunities—they’re either locked away or given as rewards to the manager’s favorite lapdogs. Mental Health Disaster Ignored by Leadership The system is brutal enough to break people. It already has—literally. Deaths on the office floor should’ve been a wake-up call. Instead, they were swept under the rug like a dirty secret.