Svantaggi
I’m sharing my experience here because the hiring process felt incredibly rushed and aggressive. They don’t really give you enough time to actually sit down and read the employment terms before they demand a commitment. For freshers especially, it’s very intimidating—you’re put on the spot to make a huge life decision without any real transparency from their side.
The biggest red flag for me was the way they handle documents and contracts. They expect you to hand over your original academic certificates as a "security deposit" and sign long-term bonds that carry heavy financial penalties if you leave. It doesn't make you feel like a valued professional; it makes you feel like you're being held hostage by the company.
Once you’re in, the workload is just relentless. It’s a mandatory six-day work week, and "standard hours" don't really exist. You’re constantly chasing unrealistic deadlines, and because they refuse to hire enough people, you end up doing the jobs of two or three people at once. It’s clearly a cost-cutting tactic, but it’s the employees who pay for it with total burnout.
There’s also a massive gap between the management and the junior staff. While the seniors get the better pay and the luxury of working from home, the junior and mid-level employees are stuck in the office. Management has a habit of dropping new tasks or calling for meetings right at logout time, expecting you to stay late without any extra pay or flexibility. It’s just not a fair or sustainable balance.
Another thing people need to know is the safety aspect. The office is tucked away in a pretty isolated industrial area. Because the work hours are so long, people—including female staff and young trainees—are often leaving the building late at night. It’s a genuine safety concern, and the company hasn't really done anything to address the discomfort of traveling home from such a remote spot at those hours.
Finally, the internal culture is pretty draining. It’s not a meritocracy; it’s more about office politics and who you're friends with in management. If you aren’t part of the "inner circle," your hard work usually goes unrecognized. Between the restrictive contracts, the safety issues, and the constant exhaustion, I’d tell anyone considering a job here to be extremely careful and ask a lot of questions before signing anything.