Pros
You get managers that don’t micro-manage (likely because they don't care enough to watch).
Cons
1. The Secret Pay Freeze & Deceptive Hiring: There is an undeclared, secret pay freeze for W2 data annotators. When you are hired, they conveniently omit this fact. You expect a yearly or bi-yearly performance review, but they deliberately avoid scheduling these reviews to dodge the conversation about compensation. I have been here for years with zero raise. 2. HR Gaslighting: When I finally cornered management regarding compensation, I escalated the issue directly to local and Global HR leadership. Despite this visibility, they feigned ignorance. They acted as if a cost-of-living adjustment is a "privilege" rather than a standard employment practice. It is clear that this "pay freeze" policy is being enforced by HR Directors themselves, while it conveniently doesn't apply to their own upper-management salaries. 3. Retroactive Stipend Theft: On December 8th, they abruptly rescinded the monthly office stipend that came with our bi-weekly checks. They applied this cancellation retroactively to December 1st with no warning and no logical reason. Their excuse? "We already provide everything you need." This is a lie. That stipend paid for the internet required to do this job. Taking it away is effectively a pay cut. 4. Stagnant Wages & No Growth: I am locked into $21.50/hour, the exact same rate they offered years ago. Asking for more hours (I am capped at 20) is treated like asking for a kidney. Every attempt at advancement is shut down. We are effectively trapped, as internal policies often prevent annotators from applying for other internal positions without resigning first. 5. The Human Cost: Working Poor & Food Insecurity: Let’s be clear about the math: $21.50 an hour capped at part-time hours means I officially count as "working poor." The financial stress is so severe that I have recurring anxious dreams about going homeless. The cost of food is so high that this wage can only stretch so far; I have often resorted to eating only eggs for weeks on end just to keep the lights on. This isn't just "tight budgeting", this is poverty wages from a billion-dollar tech vendor. 6. "Pats on the Head" vs. Real Rewards: Management makes sure to give us a nice "pat on the head" when we constantly perform and hit tight project deadlines, but that is where the appreciation ends. While we get empty verbal praise, management collects the actual project bonuses and tangible rewards derived from our hard work. A "pat on the head" does not pay the bills. It cannot be used as a foundation to ask for a raise. It does not lead to a higher position. It has zero value when looking for another job. It is a manipulative tactic to extract maximum effort for minimum pay, while you hoard the profits. 7. Hoarding Meta's Performance Bonuses: It is industry standard for clients like Meta to pay Service Level Agreement (SLA) incentives and KPI bonuses to vendors when projects are delivered on time or with high quality. We, the annotators, are the ones busting our backs to meet these strict deadlines and high-quality metrics. Yet, when RWS receives these "On-Time Delivery" bonuses from Meta, they pocket 100% of the cash and give us nothing but a "thank you" email. RWS is effectively monetizing our high performance for their own executive bonuses while keeping our wages frozen at 2019 levels. 8. Unlimited Hiring Budget vs. Zero Retention Budget: We know RWS has a healthy budget because the job boards are flooded with new openings for Data Annotators every single week. You evidently have the funds to constantly recruit, onboard, and train new batches of workers, yet you claim poverty when existing, high-performing employees ask for a raise or a transition to full-time status. This proves the money exists, you just prefer a "churn and burn" model over retaining experienced talent. 9. Public Scrutiny & Validated Collapse: My frustration with the "pay freeze" led me to research the company, and what I found was validating but horrifying. Industry blogs are now openly discussing the company's failure with headlines like "The Collapse of RWS: Facts, Cash, and the Cost of Evasion" (Loekalization, Nov 2025). Even the mainstream financial press is questioning the company's stability with reports like "Why The Narrative Around RWS Holdings Is Shifting After Recent Financial and Leadership Changes" (Yahoo Finance). It is clear that the chaotic leadership and evasion tactics we experience as workers are now visible to the entire world. The ship is sinking because leadership refuses to pay the crew.