Pros
The company is excellent at branding. From the outside, everything looks polished, values-driven, and carefully crafted for clients and conferences. If you value working with well-known global brands and watching the contrast between messaging and internal reality, there is a lot to observe here.
Cons
Layoffs occur in recurring cycles rather than isolated restructuring events. In my experience, this has happened roughly twice a year for several years. Each time, the explanation is largely the same: global economy, market conditions, macro uncertainty, industry pressure. The wording shifts slightly, but the overall narrative stays consistent. Over time, it becomes difficult to ignore that internal decisions and leadership choices are rarely part of the explanation. After each round of layoffs, the word “lean” is used again. It is used to describe the organization as if it is simply the natural result of efficiency, even when what actually happened is repeated reductions in headcount. The way “lean” is used does not always reflect what the concept actually means in practice. Remote employees tend to be impacted more frequently in these cycles. Stability appears higher closer to decision-making, regardless of performance. Visibility matters. Being seen in the right meetings or being closer to leadership can influence how performance is perceived, and that does not always align with actual output. Favoritism is not openly acknowledged, but retention and promotion patterns make internal preferences fairly visible over time. Communication often uses terms like “transparency,” “respect,” and “accountability,” but the actual communication style does not consistently reflect those principles. Important information is sometimes buried in long internal emails that require multiple reads to fully understand the key decisions. HR processes run through third-party platforms such as Deel. While the process appears structured on paper, the actual experience during transitions is not always as straightforward as documented. Overall, there is a consistent gap between how the company presents itself externally and what employees experience internally.