The reorg made sense during All Team Member meetings, but wasn't implemented correctly maybe. Some people got moved to positions they wanted but aren't qualified for, and other people got moved to positions they didn't want and aren't qualified for. Those cases in particular were never explained and led to frustration. Even if you asked for reasoning from a manager in some cases, there was a lot of sidestepping around the core issue (likely because they didn't know themselves). And if you ask too much, people start to think you have a bad attitude when all you want is clarification. Your career path became totally outside of your control and in the control of your managers who may or may not have known you or your skill sets that well. And it seems like no movement will take place for another year or so, so you just have to deal with it until then.
It seems education isn't taken into account except for initially getting hired. Along with the previous point, it didn't make sense why people were moved or not moved. Background didn't seem to be the determining factor at least. Now with the salary levels, I know recent hires with the same background but different levels of degrees, but both have the same amount of work experience (minimal), so they are placed in the same salary level. And because of the reorg, the person with the graduate degree actually has a lower salary range due to their new job title. And all these things were outside of their control, with no explanation of why this happened.