Vantaggi
Decent work-life balance if you ignore everything else
Svantaggi
If you enjoy being set up to fail, ignored by management, and surrounded by coworkers who think exclusion is a team-building exercise, then Vanguard might be perfect for you. For everyone else: run. Training was not just nonexistent, it was hostile. I was made to feel bad for asking questions. Team members had no patience to properly onboard me, then complained to the manager when I didn’t magically know how to complete “basic” analysis within a few months. Asking questions was openly discouraged, yet the same people could spend hours talking about football and protein intake without anyone batting an eye. The team culture was toxic and management enabled it. Colleagues actively avoided including me, and when I raised this, it was brushed aside as if exclusion was normal. Feedback was a joke: one day I was “too independent,” the next I was “asking too many questions.” Translation: they had no idea how to manage people and no interest in trying. Recognition is basically non-existent unless you happen to be the manager’s best friend. In that case, you’re golden. If not, everything you do will be ignored, no matter how much you contribute. I delivered projects with no support and was told I was technically strong, yet it went unnoticed because favoritism trumps actual performance here. The atmosphere was miserable. Endless complaining, gossiping behind people’s backs, and a superiority complex from employees clinging to “expertise” in a niche domain that is rapidly circling the drain. It’s like watching people rearrange deck chairs on the Titanic, but with more arrogance. To make matters worse, most of the data operations division has already been shipped off to Ireland, leaving behind a skeleton crew with no future and even less morale. Bottom line: Vanguard is a black hole for ambition and talent. Unless your dream is to stagnate in a toxic mess, avoid at all costs.