Pros
A small number of colleagues are cooperative and try to support one another despite systemic shortcomings.
Cons
Local leadership is largely disconnected from ground realities. Day-to-day operational challenges faced by project and maintenance teams are often poorly understood or not meaningfully addressed. Local management rarely challenges or pushes back on overseas directives, even when those decisions are impractical or misaligned with local constraints, regulations, or resource capacity. Lack of enforcement across departments. Responsibilities are not clearly owned, and local departments are not consistently held accountable for their deliverables, resulting in downstream teams absorbing the impact. Unclear and poorly controlled pre-sales commitments. Requirements are frequently confirmed without sufficient technical validation or internal alignment, leading to scope creep, rework, and excessive corrective effort during project execution and maintenance. Roles are ill-defined, with staff routinely expected to take on responsibilities well outside their original scope without adequate authority, support, or compensation. Disorganized processes and last-minute decision-making, with frequent reversals and minimal explanation. Attendance-driven management culture, prioritizing visibility over actual performance, effectiveness, or outcomes. “Carrot-on-a-stick” incentive approach, where progression or improvement is frequently suggested but rarely materializes in a concrete or sustainable manner. Minimal structured training and onboarding. Knowledge transfer is weak, documentation is lacking, and employees are expected to self-learn under live operational pressure. Meetings and key discussions are predominantly conducted in Chinese, limiting effective participation for non-Chinese speakers. The organization functions operationally like a small SME, yet applies a rigid, hierarchical structure typical of a large MNC, heavily shaped by overseas management culture without sufficient local adaptation. Promotions are commonly delivered via temporary allowances rather than base salary adjustments, negatively affecting long-term compensation and bonuses. Limited career development, poor communication, and declining morale are common outcomes.