Pros
My experience at M Financial Group has been great. I came from an industry and a prior leadership team that rarely acknowledged individual contributions, took all of the credit for other people’s work, and even at times reassigned relationships others had established and developed on good terms to more senior leaders in the organization, especially if those relationships were lucrative. At M, quality work is recognized and rewarded. The people are smart, capable, motivated, and professional. I’m sure it happens in some areas of the organization (and I did have one less than ideal experience with a coworker, which is likely to happen anywhere), but I have not been made to feel as though my work and opinions are irrelevant.
A few years ago, the company went through a somewhat tumultuous period involving a management shakeup, which took some time for the dust to settle. The management team now appears to be stable, and the company has been trending positively upward.
The pay and benefits are outstanding (granted, I came to M after years in a low-reward industry, so my base of comparison is limited). It has been a quality company where I have been able to continue my career and grow. I’m also grateful to be in an industry that, when managed well, is financially sound.
Cons
Direction from leaders can occasionally be unclear or contradictory to other leadership direction. More alignment at the top would help the downstream teams execute at a higher level. Some team members appear to be less informed of the company’s priorities, although that is a two-way street. The leadership team holds regular town hall meetings to discuss the company’s priorities and keep employees informed, so the information is available to those who want it. Having offices in Dallas and Portland, and with some people being mostly remote, is challenging for company-wide engagement.