Maid Covered As Management Trainee - Management Trainee Susi Air Employee Review

1.0
Dec 1, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

There's nothing that makes me want to stay. I’ve already given my best effort in the first three months.

Cons

Without realizing it, this office hires a lot of people as employees but also treats them like 'Maids'. They use the word "please" as a cover but force employees to work overtime and serve the owner in hosting guests. The tasks range from being a waiter, washing dishes, to doing so-called "beach clean up" which are actually cleaning the yard of the owner's beachfront villa. Local employees are treated poorly and paid below standard, all while the owner and their family live a lavish lifestyle. The Love-Bird are equally unreasonable, constantly yelling without listening to the reality on the ground. It’s a stark contrast to expat employees who received special treatment. Then there are the Management Trainees acting arrogant. One MT with the highest salary is also a director of a shell company created by this business. Be careful—they’ve set up many shell companies instead of employing people in their main office.

Explore other reviews about Susi Air

1.0
Apr 22, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

No meaningful positives to highlight

Cons

Management shows a consistent lack of transparency, with commitments around contracts, career progression, and working conditions frequently not being honored. This has created a strong sense of distrust among staff. Decision-making appears highly subjective. Promotions, command upgrades, and role assignments do not follow clear merit-based criteria and seem influenced by personal relationships, which undermines confidence in the system. There is a broader culture of low respect toward employees, with limited consideration for operational feedback. Morale is low and turnover is high. Career progression lacks transparency, and there is a widespread perception that local pilots (Indonesian nationals) are at a disadvantage compared to others with similar qualifications. Significant concerns exist around maintenance standards, particularly under the current maintenance management. Decisions appear heavily cost-driven, with limited emphasis on long-term reliability, and this has resulted in recurring concerns among pilots about aircraft condition. In incident or defect discussions, the maintenance manager is perceived to attribute responsibility to flight crew without a consistently balanced technical assessment. This dynamic creates friction between departments and discourages open reporting, which weakens overall safety culture.

3.0
Jun 19, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good hour building and 2 week breaks (4 weeks on 2 weeks off)

Cons

Low Pay but expected with entry level job in Asia

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All