Ah yes, MetLife GTO in Cary—where innovation goes to die and careers slowly wither under the fluorescent glow of corporate apathy.
During my time there, I witnessed a masterclass in how not to run an IT organization. The turnover was so frequent, you’d think HR had a revolving door installed just for fun. And I’m not just talking about developers or middle management—even leadership couldn’t stomach the dysfunction. When the people steering the ship start jumping overboard, it says everything you need to know.
Let’s talk about the work—or rather, the illusion of it. The FTEs (full-time employees) spent their days in endless meetings, discussing problems they neither caused nor understood, while vendors—primarily offshore teams—did the heavy lifting. Well, “heavy lifting” might be generous. Most projects ended up being rebuilt two or three times because the quality was so poor. And yet, the cycle repeated like some tragic, code-splattered Groundhog Day.
At any given time, there were at least three vendors on-site: Cognizant, InfoSys, TCS—the holy trinity of outsourced mediocrity. When the Cognizant contract collapsed (shockingly not from sheer incompetence alone), MetLife simply shuffled the deck and handed it to TCS. The result? More overpriced, underwhelming solutions, more project resets, and zero accountability.
Meanwhile, the FTEs clung to their titles, wandered between meeting rooms, occasionally wandered downstairs to play ping pong, and filled in the gaps with gossip and backchannel politics. The only thing thriving was the rumor mill.
And let’s not forget the pay. For a Fortune 50 insurance giant, the salaries at GTO are almost insulting—like being underpaid for the privilege of slowly losing your technical edge.
If you want to coast into irrelevance, lose your skills, and pretend PowerPoint slides equal progress, MetLife GTO is the place. For everyone else? Run.