Vantaggi
Pros cannot be seen in this company.
Svantaggi
One of the most dysfunctional R&D environments I have experienced. The department suffers from a severe lack of technical leadership, poor planning, and a culture that prioritizes appearances over actual engineering results. Many technical leads lack the expertise, vision, and decision-making ability required to lead complex development projects. Instead of providing technical guidance and removing obstacles, some leads create additional confusion, micromanage engineers, and shift responsibility when projects encounter problems. Engineers with genuine technical knowledge often find their inputs ignored, while ineffective leadership remains unquestioned. Higher management appears disconnected from the realities of product development and engineering execution. Project requirements are frequently unclear, constantly changing, or poorly defined. There is a greater focus on showcasing PCB prototypes and reporting superficial progress than on ensuring products are technically sound, validated, and ready for deployment. A culture of "looking busy" is rewarded more than delivering meaningful outcomes. Some individuals spend excessive hours in the office and promote themselves as high performers despite producing limited tangible results. Meanwhile, employees who work efficiently and raise legitimate technical concerns often receive little recognition. The work-life balance is extremely poor due to continuous firefighting caused by inadequate planning and weak project management. Engineers are routinely pressured to stay late and resolve recurring issues that should never have existed in a properly managed development process. Long working hours are often treated as a solution for management failures rather than addressing the root causes. Accountability is inconsistent, project ownership is unclear, and technical decisions are frequently influenced by hierarchy rather than engineering merit. This results in wasted effort, repeated rework, delayed schedules, and declining team morale. The organization has talented engineers, but their potential is significantly limited by ineffective leadership, poor management practices, and a culture that values perception over performance.