Unfortunately, my experience with this team has been overwhelmingly negative. There is a persistent culture of avoiding accountability, where team members frequently claim to be overloaded with work despite limited evidence of meaningful progress or results. Basic tasks often take far longer than expected, deadlines are regularly missed, and there is a constant sense that work is being deferred rather than completed.
Communication within the team is poor and often driven by self-preservation rather than collaboration. Instead of working together to solve problems, team members are quick to shift responsibility elsewhere when issues arise. Even relatively minor mistakes can result in finger-pointing and blame-shifting, creating an environment where people are more focused on protecting themselves than delivering quality outcomes.
Management appears disconnected from the day-to-day reality of team performance. Inefficiencies are allowed to continue unchecked, underperformance is tolerated, and there is little visible accountability for missed commitments. This has led to a culture where expectations are low and poor habits become normalized.
The impact on the client relationship is noticeable. Client concerns are often met with excuses rather than solutions, and there seems to be a growing lack of confidence in the team’s ability to deliver. From my perspective, the quality of work, responsiveness, and overall professionalism have declined significantly. I would not be surprised if the client chooses not to renew the contract given the ongoing operational issues and lack of effective leadership.
Overall, the role offers the benefit of remote work, but the team culture, accountability problems, and management shortcomings make it a frustrating place to work.SINSW - Remote work benefits overshadowed by poor team culture