Pros
None and nothing worth mentioning
Cons
Working here was a straight up headache. As a Procurement staff, I constantly got side eyed by engineers who thought I was “dragging my feet” or “barely doing my job.” Meanwhile, I couldn’t move a single thing forward without a required wet signature from upper management; yes, an actual pen-on-paper signature in 2026. So while everyone was yelling at me to hurry up, I was literally stuck waiting on approvals that took forever. Leadership is extremely budget‑tight to the point of hurting productivity. They constantly revise procurement lists based on whatever they feel like buying to “save budget,” even if it slows the entire project down. Crew needs tools? Nope. But somehow there’s always money for first‑class flights. The priorities here are wild. Engineers also complained that I “send too many emails,” but when communication is this messy, documenting everything is the only way to protect yourself. If I didn’t keep receipts, I’d be blamed for even more nonsense. The worst part? The company won’t even talk to you or ask what’s going on. No conversation, no chance to explain, just a sudden layoff. Cold. No loyalty, no respect, no professionalism.