Filling the timesheet has been made more important than health or family. Even during personal emergencies or while on leave, employees are still expected to complete and submit timesheets. This reflects an unhealthy level of micromanagement rather than trust or empathy.
Micromanagement is excessive—every break needs to be reported, monitored, and justified. Long internal meetings, unnecessary procedures, constant “pravachans,” and endless document filling consume productive time without adding value. Teams are already overloaded, yet sprint planning has become meaningless and chaotic, as clients continue to add tasks while internal management simultaneously pressures teams to complete everything ahead of schedule.
Despite this unrealistic workload, there is no recognition of effort. Promotions, appraisals, hikes, and rewards circulate only within management circles or among those who appease them. Talented and hardworking employees remain buried under deliverables, with no appreciation, no praise, and no career growth. Their contributions are ignored, leading to frustration, burnout, and a deep sense of being undervalued.
Self-respect and dignity of employees are not valued. Instead of being treated as responsible professionals, employees are treated like nursery kids—constantly monitored, instructed, and controlled.
Frequent layoffs have created a culture of fear and insecurity. Employees hesitate to speak up, push back on unrealistic expectations, or request movement out of unhealthy projects because they fear being targeted or labeled as non-performers. This environment suppresses honesty, innovation, and psychological safety.