Policies change frequently and often at the expense of employees, with limited transparency or advance communication. This creates an environment where long-term planning—career, compensation, or work-life balance—is difficult.
HR involvement tends to be reactive and performative rather than supportive. Escalations frequently prioritize risk management over employee advocacy, which can feel adversarial instead of neutral.
The culture is highly political. Visibility and appearing busy are often rewarded more than measurable outcomes or delivered value. In practice, this encourages performative work rather than effective work.
Many teams rely heavily on contractors for execution while FTEs manage optics and process. Contractor-to-FTE conversion is rare and slow; in my experience, it can take several years and often depends more on organizational politics than performance.
This may be a tolerable environment for those comfortable navigating bureaucracy and ambiguity, but it is frustrating for high performers, those seeking clarity and stability, or contractors expecting a clear path to conversion.