Pros
I worked here to make a difference and feel like I was part of something revolutionary. This rings true. I loved every assignment I was given and the work was enthralling and fresh from standard industry engineering life.
Cons
The communication between the management is not the best and it causes many miscommunication problems. The aura of this entire company is so toxic that if you miss a deadline by one hour, you will be gravely talked down to the next day. (This happens frequently however because the schedule is impossible and the CEO impinges the funding on the schedule itself.) Altogether, hours of working time are taken away from management and the workers for past deadline disciplining. Every time I performed well, I was praised with zero positivity and a request to work longer hours. I cancelled many family events and plans because Shine would tell me I could not take a vacation because their deadlines are important and I would be possibly fired if I did not work harder. My wakeup call with them was when I worked weekends racking up 60 hour weeks and nothing satisfied them. I can confidently say that my mental health deteriorated from their work culture, so I seeked psychiatric help. I was swiftly disciplined for not taking my job seriously because I had a monthly appointment with my therapist. One of the main issues the company has is funding and the CEO is unable to make convincing deals with investors without promising bigger better technology, a shorter schedule, a new facility, or a new isotope. The business moves they are making are too farfetched for the reality they are in. They have not been able to produce a single dose of a radioisotope to be sold on the market to hospitals and people who drastically need it. I used to believe in them with my full heart, but their clique of first employees and inferiority complexes made me see the reality that they are not shining on anytime soon. Also, here's the thing: They don't even pay their employees a decent salary to deal with all this negativity.