Java Developer • Current Employee
Pros: Work from home.
No micromanagement.
Good for politicians, smart, talkative sales people.
Good for people who know politics and have some domain or functional knowledge of banking and financial systems.
Cons: Worst environment out here. No respect for employees' skillsets; they just need their work to be done. Don't go by their marketing terms on new technologies. Ultimately, you have to work on 10-year-old legacy technology. Over here, only functional and domain knowledge matters. If you are equipped with cutting-edge tech like microservices, .NET Core, Cloud, DevOps, data science, or machine learning, then go home. There will be no respect for you. But you will be a superstar if you are equipped with domain or functional skillsets.
No career growth. Seriously, who will ask for these old technologies and skillsets in the current job market?
They provide the worst facilities. No parking for cars after 9:30 AM; no parking for bikes after 10 AM. Every morning, you will end up with anxiety over parking. The cafeteria looks like a fish market in Pune Business Bay, and the food is super costly. They have over-hiring and over-firing based upon the project budget every year, for which they have minimum desk allocation to associates. You will end up sharing your desk or sitting in a populated area. You can't leave your personal belongings on your desk, mistakenly or otherwise, because they will be stolen, and the admin desk doesn't have any answers to it. Lifts are overcrowded; sometimes, you have to wait for 15 minutes. And on top of that, your managers want you to come to the office on time. Trust me, you will end up with an exhausted day with all these scenarios, which will impact your family life.