Pros
Great colleagues and exposure to diverse projects help sharpen skills. Work-from-home flexibility is a big plus, and the consultative experience boosts your resume. Engaging with varied technologies keeps work dynamic. The company was once exceptional under Sverica, valuing talent and growth, but after the Quad-C acquisition, it became a typical tech firm. New hires enjoy competitive pay, though it can outpace salaries of promoted, longer-tenured employees.
Cons
This company is a classic example of an old-boys network thriving at the expense of real talent and innovation. The CEO can't get out of his own way, constantly meddling in day-to-day operations and only making things worse with his micromanagement. He and the executive team have zero trust in their subordinates or mid-level managers, second-guessing every decision and creating a toxic environment of paranoia. Executive management shows no interest in developing employees, manager or skilled employees—there's no training, no career pathing, just sink or swim. New leaders and managers get thrown into the fire without any mentoring or coaching, and when things inevitably go wrong due to lack of support, you're blamed for your "incompetence." It's a setup for failure. Client-facing issues are rampant: onboarding is a disaster due to sheer incompetence, with poor communication leading to constant escalations and unhappy customers raising more problems every week. Estimations for client work are wildly off-base, setting everyone up for missed deadlines and overwork. Don't expect fair compensation either—the CEO and executive management refuse to provide promotions or even basic cost-of-living salary increases. They'll give you lip service about how your role and expanded responsibilities will eventually reflect in your pay, but it's all fake promises. Bonuses are a joke, tied to unrealistic metrics that conveniently never get met. Work-life balance is nonexistent because of the constant firefighting from bad leadership decisions. Turnover is not great, among top performers who get burned out, while the inner circle of yes-men sticks around. Overall, it's a place where favoritism rules, and merit gets you nowhere.