Pros
Work/Life balance.
Opportunity to work on high-profile products with a strong market presence.
Cons
Despite efforts to present itself as an American employer, my experience was that TP-Link remains fundamentally a Chinese company operating in the United States. The culture, management style, communication patterns, and decision-making processes are heavily driven by the China organization.
Most senior leadership positions are held by Chinese nationals, and advancement into the highest levels of leadership appears extremely limited for others. In my experience, Mandarin was the preferred language among many senior leaders, and important discussions and decisions frequently occurred outside the visibility of the broader organization.
U.S.-based leaders often appeared to have less authority than their titles suggested, with major decisions ultimately controlled elsewhere. Transparency was limited, organizational changes were frequent, and priorities often shifted without clear explanation.
The company talks about building an American organization, but I saw little evidence that it operates like a typical U.S.-based technology company. Employees should understand that they are joining a company whose leadership culture and decision-making structure remain firmly rooted in China.