Pros
You work for a pro sports team and the people are great to work around for the most part.
Cons
1. Compensation Misalignment Pay grade did not reflect the scope of responsibilities or the impact of the work. Responsibilities often went beyond the role’s classification without corresponding financial recognition. 2. Scope Creep / Taking on Sales Responsibilities Frequently performing tasks typically handled by Sales Representatives or Managers, such as client follow-ups, outreach coordination, or performance analysis. Lack of formal authority to make sales decisions or engage with clients directly, despite doing behind-the-scenes work that supports revenue. 3. Limited Career Advancement Few formal opportunities for upward mobility within the role. Performing higher-level tasks did not necessarily translate into promotion potential. 4. Non-Client Facing Nature of Role High reliance on internal collaboration and reporting rather than direct revenue-generating interactions. Limited visibility with clients, which sometimes made it harder to demonstrate the impact of your work externally. 5. High Responsibility, Low Autonomy Responsible for operational accuracy and reporting that impacted sales decisions, but with limited decision-making authority. Needing to escalate issues rather than acting independently in some situations. 6. Repetitive or Administrative Tasks Some administrative processes (ticket printing, gift card fulfillment, report reconciliation) could be time-consuming and repetitive relative to strategic contributions. 7. Pressure Without Recognition Tasks often critical to team performance but not always acknowledged externally or factored into performance reviews.