Svantaggi
I rarely write reviews, but I felt future candidates deserve a realistic picture of what they are signing up for.
The company presents itself as a place where freshers can learn, grow, and build strong technical skills. My experience was very different. Much of the work revolved around repetitive development tasks with limited technical depth, and the opportunities for meaningful engineering growth were far less than what was implied during the hiring process.
The culture is heavily focused on monitoring and control. Employees are expected to account for almost every minute of their day. Need a short break? Log out. Need tea or coffee? Hope you make it during the designated time window. The company seems far more concerned with tracking attendance than measuring outcomes.
The tea and coffee situation perfectly reflects the overall culture. Refreshments are available only during fixed hours. If you're late, even by a few minutes, you're out of luck. Employees are expected to wash their own cups and lunch utensils as well. On its own, that's not a major issue. Combined with everything else, it contributes to an environment where every small convenience feels tightly controlled and every rupee spent on employees feels carefully calculated.
The benefits are underwhelming, especially for consultants. Employees are expected to show commitment and loyalty while receiving limited benefits and relatively little security in return. The imbalance becomes increasingly obvious over time.
HR policies feel outdated. No dedicated sick leave. No casual leave. Employees are expected to rely largely on earned leave. For a software company operating in a competitive industry, this feels surprisingly employee-unfriendly.
The experience can be particularly disappointing for freshers. Many join hoping to gain valuable industry exposure, only to find themselves dealing with bonds, excessive monitoring, restrictive policies, and slower-than-expected professional growth. By the time they are free to move on, some may find themselves behind peers who spent the same period in more growth-oriented environments.
The notice period process can also be frustrating. Employees leaving the company often feel treated more like retention problems than professionals making a career decision. Flexibility appears limited even when there is little meaningful work remaining.
The people working here are generally hardworking and capable. The problem is not the employees. The problem is a culture that prioritizes control over trust, compliance over autonomy, and retention over employee satisfaction.
If you are considering joining, ask detailed questions about the work, growth opportunities, leave policies, employment model, monitoring practices, and notice period expectations before accepting an offer. The answers to those questions will tell you far more than the recruitment pitch.
I would not recommend this company to anyone who values technical growth, autonomy, modern workplace policies, or being treated like a professional adult.