Terrible Leadership - Field Engineer BiSN Employee Review

2.0
Jun 28, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Fun job as far as travel and the work, the cool emerging tools they manufacture. The people you meet from the places you travel to are all fun and fulfilling

Cons

Required to be in the shop,... as a shop hand manufacturing the tools daily. from 7am- 4pm. No time off after you've been away from home for weeks on end, support in the field is non existent. The only Oil and Gas Service company I've ever worked for where the cons far outweigh the pros. Field Engineers with this company are not treated well, at all. The manufacturing part of the company, and the Field Service NEED to be completely different entities run, the latter not being run by the CEO or his minions, but by personnel who have been in the field and know exactly what its like.

Explore other reviews about BiSN

5.0
May 2, 2022
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Room to grow, promote within.

Cons

Growing company so a lot is required of employees.

2.0
Feb 28, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Although a small company, they operate worldwide and you get to learn about worldwide logistical issues. Some good and smart employees exist which are the only reasons for this place not going down yet. The company pays decent salary (with the caveat that other benefits suck and keeps getting worse).

Cons

An incredibly toxic environment. The abusive owner of this place transitioned from accounting into inventorship, and in my experience, financial metrics consistently took priority over employee mental and physical well-being. His style is best described metaphorically as expecting employees to take extreme risks while being told to “do it safely.” A large portion of senior management will backstab each other and their own subordinates (although no org chart exists). Long-tenured employees often appeared disengaged or emotionally withdrawn. Professional boundaries are unclear, and personal relationships within leadership contributes to perceptions of favoritism.

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