Avantages
The quality and integrity of the colleagues that you work with. Many people have been with the company for a long time - look in the parking lot at all of the 25 year signs, this is a tribute to the loyalty to the company. These people hold knowledge and experience that cannot be replaced with a few weeks of training. Having the opportunity to work with new and innovative products, to be able to move to different divisions and learn new processes and businesses - was encouraged. You are able to grow in your position by taking on new projects or moving on to other areas, such as moving between sales and marketing, from service to sales. People who were achievers in one area were given an opportunity to move to other areas, such as moving from customer service management to technical service management. The change and diversity of ideas seemed to add positive energy.
Inconvénients
Being an American, it is always difficult working for a company that although it recognizes the US as the largest market for selling its products, does not respect our marketing or marketing research. Working for this Swiss-German owned company, the US group is treated like a distributor, that because of our size they have to put up with. When products are not designed to specifications as originally agreed upon, well the rest of the world doesn't need that feature, so why does the US? If there is a product problem, it is always because the US customer did not use it correctly. If a launch date is delayed by Germany, it is ok, but if US sales are below plan due to that product not being available, too bad! As a product manager - middle manager, you had to make every effort to get along with your global counter parts, who at the middle level were decent folks, but had little leverage. But they might be able to help with back orders or push for one specification over another. There were a lot of politics and you had to be involved enough to know channels on both sides of the ocean. Concerning the 300 R& D employees who lost their jobs because their jobs would be hired in Germany - Fishers, IN should raise the taxes that Roche pays locally. Then Roche laid off 250 more people in 2008 from Indianapolis, many who had been with the company over 15 years. Tillman made it clear in company townhall meetings that these layoffs were because the company needed more profit out the Indianapolis corporation.