67% positive business outlook
Pros
Good pay and great work-life balance
Cons
Sometimes inadequate management and guidance
Pros
Large employer with many openings (software development, architecture, IT services, infrastructure). Exposure to international projects (financial institutions, EU institutions, telecommunications, Greek government). Equal opportunities employer: there are female managers and many old colleagues
Cons
Low salaries: similarly sized companies pay 20% more No career opportunities: promotions take decades Disorganised: project management focuses on time reporting but ignores deliverables Bad culture: rude people, threats from management, no transparency, gossip and backstabbing, no mentorship, processes are a facade Bad location: horrible offices, bad connection to public transportation, bad neighbourhood Demographics: it's a gerontocracy, too many old people who don't care about the young
Pros
Good pay for all the staff
Cons
No leaves encash for the staff
Pros
mentality, ability to work remotely, benefits
Cons
Not able to be promoted, not pay raises
Pros
Good work life balance. Pay is good.
Cons
Long hours Managemnent sometimes is harsh
Pros
Competitive salary, pay on time, good teams
Cons
Bad management, could be more organized
Pros
* Pay on time & ok salary for Greece. This is not a benefit for any other company outside of Greece. * Some good European projects, although the way Unisystems works they mess the projects and anyone who tries to do some good technical work
Cons
* Unisystems carries the immature, problematic, harassing Greek culture of cronyism, nepotism and communism. Everyone trying to take the other out, but playing the etiquette of being a "nice person" to the point where they believe it. * The culture's motto is "be dependent, do not be better" * Slander those they are jealous of: If you appear to be more skilled than others, everyone starts gossiping and judging, like the bad jealous students do in class, and like it is a small jealous village * They like to judge others than speak of themselves * No rules for harassment. Whoever can harass others without looking upset wins * Immature manners, shallow, basic personality, and not even realisation of what professional attitude is * Ignorance with confidence: It is the case where really they don't know what they don't know and leave no space for doubt that they don't Staff get insulted when asked to follow the process. As classic Greeks, they work under the nepotism and cronyism. * Staff do not know what being professional is - following processes, having a professional attitude, not making things personal, and following a dress code They think that being professional attitude means to talk in a passive aggressive, controlling attitude. Dress code is for them a mystic word that most may never understand. Like in all of Greece, they confuse dress code with wealth. They think that the rich wear suits & ties, and the poor wear sports clothes. * Everything is unorganized, from organograms to plans, to desk locations. For example, rooms and desks do not have labels or numbers, so it is complex to even locate where others are * Teams are unorganised. There are no team structures - this is the classic Greek cronyism. People who previously worked as managers were employed as consultants and placed at employee level, even when the teams they worked for needed to have leads and managers. Most of them left. * The meeting booking app does not work correctly, so booking meeting rooms is a guess Examples of the employee behaviour: - Someone would come every day and try to call me names like "Hey big guy" "Huge guy", even though we were not friends and I did not reply to him. He would keep doing so for weeks, without seeming to realise he was being awkward. - Another day I would find the same person searching through my staff. - Other staff would occasionally try to take equipment from my desk that apparently everyone is charged for, as if it is theirs. For such matters, the manager blamed me back for, because this is the easier solution. - The IT support desk of Unisystems also blames when making requests, by saying "it is their fault". They do not log tickets, and are far from any sense of an IT helpdesk in any other company. - The last days before I left, a lady who just managed to not speak to me for over a year decided to do so. She thought that it was a good idea to start criticising me after having already left. She sat persistently while I was having lunch impulsively asking why I had left, and counter-judging with further personal questions, getting angrier and angrier. She eventually convinced herself with her questions that I did not like the company. I had to tell her to leave as she just didn't get that I was not interested any more. She missed to realise that she hadn't spoken for a year, never been even friendly on basic level, and her own behaviour was a showcase of why someone would want to leave. This ignorance and denial is typical Unisystems behaviour. - The manager told others that I was leaving within approximately 15 minutes. This is the level of confidentiality of Unisystems, generally speaking. Soon a group of people started questioning me at lunch even though I said it was not their job, and most had not spoken for a year.
Pros
The company recruits smart people; The majority of employees are young, hard-working, sociable and therefore there is a positive vibe in the daily work routine.
Cons
The only goal is to work as long as it takes to hit a deadline. You will work nights, weekends without pay and if you dont hit your impossible deadline you get yelled, cursed etc. Projects are poorly designed and developed with no focus on quality. If you travel abroad watch your balance sheet,. The company's policy is to have cheap production regardless if they burn out their employees.
Pros
If all you want is a contract that pays on time and a company name that recruiters recognize, Uni Systems will give you that. There’s hybrid work policy and exposure to big clients. You’ll learn how bureaucracy works at scale. That’s about it.
Cons
Behind the corporate façade lies a culture that quietly drains motivation and skill. -Pay: Consistently 20–30 % below industry average. Salary “reviews” are ceremonial. Raises, if they appear, are less than inflation. -Management: Dominated by outdated hierarchies and middle managers who confuse control with leadership. Decisions flow top‑down with no technical reasoning. -Career growth: Promotions are decorative — used to keep people from leaving, NOT to recognize talent. Seniority here means surviving, not improving. -Toxic micro‑politics: Gossip, favoritism, and subtle bullying are routine. Constructive feedback is treated as rebellion. -Culture: Innovation is talked about, not practiced. Most teams recycle old solutions just to meet unrealistic deadlines. -Learning: Zero structured mentorship. Training happens only after hours — if you’re still awake enough to care. The longer you stay, the less you believe things can change. People stop complaining not because they’re happy — but because they’ve given up.
Pros
Gain good SW engineering experience on some IT tools, especially if you are entry-level.
Cons
-Long hours, even on weekends -Low pay considering the work and amount of overitme -Bad or non-existent communication from management -No room for advancement -Very basic benefits package
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