Pros
Strong culture of trust, autonomy, and psychological safety. As a Staff Technical Program Manager, I’ve been encouraged to ask questions, challenge assumptions, and influence without hierarchy from day one. High talent density. The engineers, product managers, designers, and fellow TPMs I’ve worked with so far are sharp, collaborative, and genuinely invested in building the right things the right way. Clear mission and customer focus. Teams stay grounded in customer impact, which makes prioritization and tradeoff discussions more meaningful. Leadership accessibility. Leaders are visible, approachable, and open to feedback, which helps new hires ramp faster and feel connected. Thoughtful onboarding relative to company scale. For a large organization, Intuit does a good job helping new employees understand context, systems, and expectations.
Cons
Like many large organizations, navigating complexity takes time. Processes, tooling, and decision paths aren’t always obvious in the first few months. Some areas still feel siloed, which can slow cross-org alignment for programs that span multiple teams. Ramp-up can be intense due to the breadth of systems and domains, especially for senior roles expected to add impact quickly