Vantaggi
There are a lot of opportunities to grow technically and broaden your expertise through complex and often high-impact projects. The teams are composed of highly capable and collaborative individuals, making day-to-day interactions one of the most rewarding aspects of the job. Most middle managers are reasonable, approachable, and genuinely try to support their teams. Additionally, the newly built campus is visually stunning and thoughtfully designed, providing an inspiring physical work environment.
Svantaggi
The transition to the new campus has been poorly managed, exposing a significant disconnect between site leadership and day-to-day realities. Site leaders often appear as reactive, out of touch, and at times, outright arrogant. Policies are imposed in a top-down, one-size-fits-all manner that feels controlling and culturally tone-deaf. More troubling is the shift in how R&D staff are treated—more like factory line workers than creative professionals. Attempts to raise concerns are frequently met by vague reassurances, while those enforcing the rules often fail to follow them themselves. Concerns raised beyond middle management are typically ignored or dismissed without meaningful action. The only time issues seem to get serious attention is when they're escalated through public channels like this one. The lack of a clear career progression framework and meaningful self-development opportunities makes long-term growth within the company uncertain. There's a pervasive sense of job insecurity, where failure to conform to arbitrary and sometimes counterproductive rules can put your position at risk. Middle management and HRBP are frequently sidelined and largely powerless to advocate for their teams. For a company that brands itself as high-tech, product development is surprisingly chaotic—marked by rushed timelines, unclear priorities, and constant last-minute changes. It often feels more like a disorganized student project than a mature R&D effort. There's little evidence of a real innovation culture. Instead, it feels like a random trial-and-error process—throwing darts and seeing what sticks—random, reactive, and without strategic direction.