My experience at Jaipur Rugs was characterized by an environment where trust appeared to be in short supply and surveillance appeared to be prioritized over employee engagement.
Talented professionals are recruited from across the country and encouraged to relocate often making significant personal and financial commitments. However employees can find themselves asked to leave with little notice and without severance support leaving them to absorb the consequences of relocation on their own.
The organization frequently promotes values such as employee well-being empowerment and trust. Unfortunately, many day-to-day management practices appear inconsistent with these principles.
Employees were being informally monitored beyond their actual work performance. Team members appeared to be positioned across departments and floors in ways that created the impression that employee movements, interactions, breaks, and daily activities were being observed and reported to management.
Rather than creating a culture built on accountability and outcomes, the workplace often felt focused on observation and behavioural scrutiny.
Work-life boundaries were frequently blurred. Communication often occurred through calls and voice notes outside standard working hours, creating an expectation of continued availability even during personal time.
Formal communication and reporting structures were surprisingly limited. Important instructions, feedback, and decisions were often communicated through voice notes and verbal conversations rather than documented channels, making accountability and transparency difficult.
Decision-making was highly centralized, with limited room for professional judgment or independent ownership. Employees were often expected to follow directions rather than contribute expertise.
The organization's external reputation and internal employee experience often felt disconnected. Considerable emphasis is placed on culture and values, yet many employees experience a workplace defined by control, monitoring, and uncertainty.
Prospective employees should look beyond public ratings and carefully conduct their own due diligence. Based on my experience, there was significant emphasis on managing the organization's external image, including encouraging positive reviews on employer-review platforms. I would strongly encourage candidates to speak with multiple current and former employees across departments before accepting an offer, particularly those who have left the organization, to gain a balanced understanding of the workplace culture, management style, and employee experience.