Pros
Well-known global pharmaceutical brand
Exposure to large, complex enterprise programs
Exposure to work with people across multiple geographies
Good understanding of compliance-heavy environments
Wonderful benefits (pay, healthcare, leaves, etc) unmatched in any other organizations
Cons
Leadership in some teams is fear-driven and control-oriented
Roles and ownership are unclear and keep shifting
Culture is heavily focused on showing importance rather than doing meaningful work
A lot of activity, meetings, and communication, but relatively little real execution
Performance is judged more on perception and visibility than actual outcomes
Low psychological safety – asking questions or seeking clarity is discouraged
Excessive urgency culture even for routine work
Poor work-life boundaries with frequent late-night and weekend emails
Matrix structure increases politics and finger-pointing
Learning & Growth
Very little genuine professional learning happens beyond understanding internal politics, survival tactics, and perception management. It’s more about navigating power structures than building skills or delivering impact.
Culture
The combination of pharma legacy (hierarchical, risk-averse) and a poorly executed matrix model creates ambiguity, insecurity, and constant pressure. Ambiguity often feels intentional.