Totally depends on what division and business unit of Harris that you are in.
My experience:
Very middle management heavy.
Managers often do not have the skill set to assist with much of anything, other than the yearly reviews. Management team often interjects chaos instead of working towards any semblance of organization.
Great promises were made to all new clients, with the known inability to deliver in a timely manner. Namely due to the lack of organization and experience within our business unit.
The staff was not allowed to convey to clients that we were hit by Ransomware, so the employees were thrown under the buss for 'lack of progress' when there was no system to sign into and work on. I'm not sure where Ransomware is in the Harris core values: Accountability, Responsibility, Ownership.
Nope. Not there.
More often than not, employees were asked to work additional hours to help offset the poor time-management and planning that their Project Managers exhibited throughout the life cycle of projects. Another core value of Harris not being followed: Respect of the Individual.
In addition to the overtime, there was the request to 'work harder' - as if it was not clearly obvious to all parties involved that the management team did not have sufficient resources to cover existing projects. You can't just 'work harder' and expect everything to get better. Find a solution to the problem using common sense.
One of the greater problems at Harris has been, and continues to be the lack of communication between management and teams on projects, which leads to a set of goals that only management and stakeholders are aware of. Providing promises without conveying to the folks doing the work that a promise had been made is a recipe for disaster. See also Harris core value: Communication and Sharing Knowledge.
Finally:
Bad News Does Not Get Better With Time.
For the love of god - follow this core value and have the hard conversations with your clients and staff that are needed, instead of avoiding the the issue, or sending nasty grams and punching down on your staff because of your own inadequacies.