Avantages
You'll learn a lot in a short amount of time because you're often given significant responsibility early in your tenure. The pace is fast, and employees frequently wear multiple hats, which can help build a broad skill set.
Inconvénients
The company feels like a revolving door. Employee turnover is extremely high, and many teams operate in a constant state of understaffing. Documentation and formal training are consistently deprioritized because the people with the necessary knowledge rarely have the time to create or maintain resources before becoming overwhelmed and leaving.
Leadership often acknowledges staffing challenges but expects teams to "make it work" regardless. Managers and team leads are asked to deliver more with fewer resources, yet are still held accountable when quality suffers or customers complain. There is a strong emphasis on speed over quality, which can create unnecessary stress and rework.
Career growth opportunities are inconsistent and often depend more on organizational vacancies caused by turnover than on deliberate development plans. Employees who take on responsibilities beyond their role are praised for their flexibility but may also find themselves held accountable for issues outside their control.
Compensation reviews are frustratingly slow, and salary adjustments often fail to reflect the additional responsibilities employees have taken on. Advancement can feel more dependent on aligning with corporate messaging and politics than on consistently delivering strong results.