Great mission, but I'm not convinced the stability lasts 30 years
Pros
Stable employment with excellent benefits and a predictable schedule. Coworkers are generally friendly and collaborative. WFH flexibility is a major plus, especially for employees with young families. The mission is genuinely compelling and the Lab does work that matters, like the optical laser communications system flown on NASA's Artemis II mission.
Cons
For junior staff, the role can feel execution heavy rather than strategic. Autonomy narrows over time as you end up managing multiple layers of stakeholders, and a lot of energy goes into navigating that rather than the work itself. Leadership prioritization can feel reactive, driven more by whoever is loudest in the room than by clear strategy, and it's common to see months of work go into projects that ultimately stall. Operations doesn't get the same rigor around prioritization that research does, and nearly everything gets labeled top priority, which means nothing is. Cost cutting has felt uneven. Broad across the board reductions have landed hardest on teams that had already found efficiencies. Longer term, the Lab faces a real tension it hasn't resolved. As a federally funded, no profit research center, efficiency still matters for justifying costs to government sponsors, but investing seriously in operations raises near term costs while under investing slows research and frustrates the engineers sponsors are paying for. Leadership skews heavily academic, with less representation from people who've solved these kinds of operational problems elsewhere. Given slow promotion timelines and salary compression, the long term stability that's supposed to justify the trade off doesn't feel guaranteed, which makes it harder to accept.