Pros
It's an easy life, if you have a thick skin and not much ambition. The company has some huge projects - mainly Government and Utilities - and that might be at least one reason to consider them as an employer. There's enormous scope for swinging the lead and lots of little nooks and crannies to hide in and avoid being noticed. The company's progressive policy on teleworking means that most folks can skulk at home not doing much from one week's end to the next, whilst pretending to work. The old saw about Mushrooms (people being kept in the dark and buried in ordure) was never truer than here at Fujitsu. That being said, there are a few outstanding (technical, engineering) individuals trying to do their best in extremely difficult circumstances - although I suspect there's precious little prospect of these folks remaining with the organisation for any longer than it takes for them to find another job, or maybe for their retirement to fall due.
Cons
Widespread lack of professionalism, incompetence - especially across the management cadre - and the almost complete lack of integrity amongst most employees. The reality of their vaunted "commitment to quality" is laughable, and the management takes pride in their ability to avoid thinking about issues in favour of either throwing their weight around and attempting to look big, or else finding some department or individual to scapegoat for their own - considerable - failings. Salaries are low, especially considering their location in the heartland of the UK's IT industry. Their '60s vintage headquarters building is like some Soviet monument, with little space and even fewer facilities or creature comforts. Their IP network its total joke, with intranet and Internet access often slower than via a dial-up modem. Tools and methods are prehistoric - and that's when people can even be bothered to us them (i.e. rarely). In a nutshell, avoid!