Avantages
Hands‑On Exposure - Direct interaction with semiconductor equipment and customers provides valuable insight into how the machines operate on the fab floor.
Inconvénients
Weak, Reactive Management - Priorities shift almost weekly, with no long‑term technical roadmap. - Decisions are predominantly crisis‑driven, trapping teams in perpetual firefighting. - Software product development is being overseen by people who have been thrust into management despite having no grasp of the software development life cycle. Finger‑Pointing Culture - When defects surface, leadership’s first instinct is to assign blame rather than investigate root causes. Politics at the Top - Promotions and high‑visibility projects hinge on alliances rather than merit. - Executive disagreements routinely overturn months of engineering effort, wasting time and morale. Messy Software Development & “Test‑in‑Production” Culture - No unified version‑control workflow, gated CI/CD pipeline, or coding standards—each engineer follows personal conventions. - Nearly zero in‑house testing; quality is validated only when engineers, service teams, or even customers run the software on production machines. - This approach inflates release risk, erodes customer trust, and forces engineers into stressful on‑site firefights. Stalled Career Progression - No competency framework or transparent promotion criteria—consistent hard work rarely translates into advancement. - Senior positions are effectively capped—unless you come out on top in the office politics—so lateral moves are usually the only viable path for career growth.