Pros
• Generally friendly environment and easy to settle in when you first join • Once you’re working in the nuclear sector, there is strong long-term stability and job security • If you land on a project you enjoy, you can often stay there for a long time • Some genuinely interesting and high-profile projects exist, and they can open doors to future roles with clients • The company is very large, which brings structure and stability • Social side is decent – especially the end-of-year events
Cons
• Work can be quite repetitive and heavily focused on reading and reviewing documentation • Graduates tend to be quite clique-driven, which can make it harder to integrate fully • Getting onto good projects can be competitive, particularly with many graduates competing for limited roles • If you end up on a project you don’t enjoy, it can be difficult to move because the focus is on keeping people fully utilised • Promotions feel slow and difficult to achieve • Performance and development processes feel like a box-ticking exercise rather than something meaningful • Line management can be frustrating – you may be managed by someone at a similar level of experience and on a completely different project, which makes visibility and performance discussions harder • No bonus structure