Pros
Some of the people are nice, but most have left or been removed
Cons
Node4 presents itself as a modern IT services provider, but internally it still operates with a legacy data centre mindset. While the market moves rapidly towards AI, automation and outcome-based services, the company’s commercial thinking feels stuck in the past.
Acquisitions were meant to modernise the business. In practice, integration is weak. Newly acquired capabilities are absorbed into an unchanged operating model instead of reshaping it. Rather than building a coherent, future-focused portfolio, the same legacy approach is applied across everything.
Specialist and consultative services are treated like commoditised infrastructure. Differentiation is diluted. When growth expectations are missed, the response is restructuring rather than confronting the underlying strategy. Roles are cut, teams reduced, and knowledge leaves — but little fundamentally changes.
Culturally, influence is uneven. Long-standing relationships with the founder carry weight, informal networks matter, and accountability is inconsistent. For those outside established circles, driving change or challenging entrenched thinking can feel futile.
Externally, the language is transformation and growth. Internally, resistance to change is strong. The result is slow decisions, fragmented accountability and limited agility.
There are capable people in the business, but without real structural change, the company risks remaining a legacy provider wearing a modern badge.
Prospective employees and customers should approach with clear eyes.