Pros
Fully Remote with Home Office Support | The company provides flexibility to work from home and offers a home office stipend to ensure employees have what they need to be productive. Strong Benefits Package | Medical, dental, vision, AD&D, and life insurance were comprehensive and very reasonably priced. Supportive Colleagues | Team members were generally helpful and friendly, and many were willing to answer questions or provide guidance when available. Highly Competitive Pay | Compensation was well above industry average for similar operations roles. Ryan clearly values the work their teams perform.
Cons
Inconsistent Onboarding & Documentation | Onboarding for the Operations department was minimal, and SOPs were often outdated or unclear. This made the initial learning curve steeper than necessary. Fast-Paced, “Sink or Swim” Environment | Work demand ramps up quickly, and the expectations for accuracy are high. New employees may receive high-impact tasks early on without full context and with minimal support from leadership, which can be challenging. Management Capacity Is Stretched Thin | Leaders across departments handled large workloads, which made them less available for day-to-day support, especially during periods of growth. Growing Pains in a Rapidly Scaling Division | The division I worked in (Ryan Legal Services) was expanding quickly, and some processes and responsibilities were either vague or still being defined. Steep Ramp-Up and Operational Complexity | Workload grows quickly, Shifting job duties and procedures require fast adaptation with limited comprehension of context. Employees who prefer structured, stable workflows may find the environment challenging. Cross-Department Alignment Challenges | Cross-department collaboration, especially between Legal and Operations, sometimes faced challenges. Expectations for administrative tasks were not always aligned, which created additional workload pressure on an already lean Operations team. Sluggish & Repetitive Decision-Making Across Divisions | As the company scaled, cross-division decision-making could be slow or repetitive. Discussions about responsibilities or processes sometimes extended over several weeks, likely due to the complexity of merging multiple teams, political structures, and overall difference of opinions.