Pros
• You’ll meet some of the nicest coworkers in the defense world. The people are warm, collaborative, and genuinely want to do good work. • Job security tends to be steady if your government sponsor is happy and you don’t challenge the status quo too hard. • There is an Employee Stock Ownership Plan (ESOP), and the idea of being an “owner” means something to some people even if the impact is limited.
Cons
• Compensation is well below market for all technical roles. Folks here wear multiple hats but are paid like it’s still 2010. • Outdated tech stacks and homegrown tools are the norm. You may end up trying to build modern solutions using platforms your previous company sunset a decade ago. • The office environment reflects the tech . . .worn, cramped, and frozen in time. That might sound quirky, but it can weigh on morale. • Growth and learning can stagnate. It’s easy to go years without being exposed to current industry tools or modern development practices. • The belief that Torch will win contracts purely because it’s “trusted” is dangerous. Goodwill doesn’t replace technical delivery. • The ESOP is often referenced in lieu of raises or modernization. It’s not a solution when inflation is rising and rents are outpacing paychecks. • Some job descriptions ask for the moon . . expecting AI/ML, ISR, full-stack development, cloud engineering, and weapons systems experience from one person. It signals a misunderstanding of how high-functioning technical teams actually operate. • Not all Glassdoor reviews here tell the full story. Many are short and vague, possibly written under pressure or during company initiatives.