Deloitte reviews

3.6

73% would recommend to a friend

(81,849 total reviews)
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David Dupont-Noel

88% approve of CEO

51% positive business outlook

Deloitte has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 81,849 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Deloitte employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Management et conseil aux entreprises industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

82K reviews
2.0
Nov 8, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The company has a lot of pros. Its a great company to work for. Of course how well it works will depend largely on leadership. Like all consulting companies, there is a large pool of experienced talent to help you gain knowledge and experience. As a Center Associate (type of developer that remains at a particular center primarily), the developers are really nice and are willing to share their knowledge and time. There are numerous projects and you can get on a project based on your skill level. The benefits are generally great. These are changing and may not be as good as they currently are for those hired in 2013. They provide mentors for entry-level employees and a simple training project. The culture is laid back.

Cons

Most of what Center Associates were told in orientation is false or greatly exaggerated. We were even told "If you can't make it here, you can't make it anywhere." Well that depends on how well it is executed at the local level. Most of the orientation training is geared towards those on the consultant track not those who work at a specific center. You have to relearn how everything works once you get to your center. Training is lackluster. Don't expect to be given any specialized training in Microsoft, IBM, Oracle, etc. They only provide entry-level employees with a project to build for maybe 2 months. Most find it to be a bit of a challenge. They only care about the end result (whether it appears to work or not). They will not check to make sure you did not rig it to work. You are given mentors that help you out. However, after this, you are simply thrown on a project and it is largely sink or swim unless they put you on with more experienced developers who can help you out. Employees who come in as "experienced" do not get this support. They may be thrown on a project by themselves even if they have reservations. Center associates (the title has changed) do not get to choose their on projects. They are chosen for them. Once you are on the project, it is almost impossible to get off. One person was on a project, he did a good job but they could not find a replacement or client wanted to extending the project, so he was forced to stay on the project many months. He hated the project and the client. He was still on the project almost a year after it was supposed to end. They provide online books and training material through Skillsoft. It sucks! The estimated time is wrong and you only get credit for the hours it says it should take to complete the course. The truth is you will spend 2 or 3 times that amount and may not even learn much of anything. Overall training sucks! Don't count on it. The guys at the center are much more helpful. Local leadership does not intervene when there are problems. You are assigned counselors, but they do not check up on you when they know there may be some issues. They do not check with the client when you bring issues to their attention. Don't expect that you will be treated fairly or that any "evidence" you collect even if it is obviously strong, will be considered. They don't care! Documentation doesn't work. Just about any childish thing or unprofessional thing you can think of that could be wrong with leadership is true. Local leadership is so bogged down with their own numerous projects to help you make a success of your project--even if the issue is only communication and not technical. Counselors might as well not exist. When you get on a project, either the project manager will like you or not. This can, but not always, affect the rating you receive on a project. Don't expect people to always be objective--even when they seem to be "nice people." Utilization - You may be promised tons of vacation time. Great! That doesn't mean you will get to use it! Of the total available time (literally possible from the standpoint of an 8 hour day and 52 weeks), you will be required to maintain 90% utilization. Utilization is how much you work on a project vs how much you did not. Of course Deloitte only makes money when you are on a project. So when you are off a project or on vacation, they are losing money. EVERYTHING counts against your utilization! That includes your holidays, vacation time, and sick time. Not meeting the 90% utilization of all possible work hours in a year, can result in a reduced rating or lose of a job. Now you might think that well, "I just won't take much vacation." That depends. You can be a good employee. You can get high ratings, but center associates (as they used to be called) are not allowed to find their own projects. So... in between projects you may sit on the bench for weeks and months before they place you on another project. All that time, you might as well be taking vacation. You want to be in the center so they can see you and you can stay on them about getting you on a project, but IT WILL COUNT against your utilization. So as some reviewers have stated, you basically have to work overtime just to make up for the lost hours--especially if you have any intention of going on vacation. What I'm saying is this: leadership can mess you up so that you don't get to take vacation even if you've earned it. Also you are given tons of vacation time but you can't use it all. You can only roll over half of your time and you can NEVER cash it in. I hope this information is helpful. If you are a really good employee with good experience, you should be fine. You may work long hours. The culture is generally laid back. If you struggle with anything, even if you seek help and are proactive, you may find yourself in want. Don't expect a lot of compensation for hard work. Many people got excellent scores and got little or no raise or bonus. Numerous people left the company after busting their tail only to find out they weren't getting raises. It has been said even by leadership that it is best to COME in making around what you want than to expect to be rewarded after you have joined the company. Most people have to leave and come back to make the money they want.

3.0
Feb 26, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You will get opportunities to work on different domains and play around with different technologies. Work life balance always depends on the kind of project and people you work with. Till now no bad experiences. Certain benefits they give are quite good. Awards here are not a mere thank you note , they actually give away money. Work from home is an added benefit

Cons

Firm culture, not as open as they claim. Here they believe in filling employees plate with work till it over flows. That’s ok but on top of that if you want good rating’s you have to do firm initiatives otherwise no promotion. Most of the good work and stuff is onsite and offshore is left out with mechanical stuff to do Works like a typical service based firm. Bad parking facilities in Delhi office

1.0
May 20, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Culture of excellence, awesome career challenges, work with best in class peers, some inspiring leaders, and competitive benefits IF you miraculously worked 40-45 hours; (see CONS)

Cons

Where to start?? How about with my headlines. Most places expect you to work 40 hours a week. Some places a bit more. Few have have leadership (PPDs) who make an *average* of $600k annually, but blackmail junior staff (who make a tiny fraction of PPD income) into working for free by calling it a "Firm Contribution". Pardon? Contributions are what feed the poor, house the homeless, and teach struggling kids. Deloitte made $30 Billion (USD) last year. The partners are the least in need of a "contribution" . Yet if staff fail to make this 'contribution' they will either not get promoted, or they will be shown the door. Contribution used to be based on number of hours, but is moving to "impact" namely how much money did your slave labor bring into the firm? If the impact isn't great enough, if you didn't "contribute" enough, (regardless of other performance metrics) please bring your badge and laptop to a meeting with HR. So maybe you make $140k, but if you tally it up against the hours asked of you, you really only make $75k versus working for a sane, ethical organization that doesn't extort free work from you. I'll save some text here; Google "Rank and Yank" to understand how HR and evaluations work. 10% are cut from Deloitte annually, no matter what. I've had some awesome couselees kicked to the curb because they missed some minor metric, even if overall they were star performers. It makes for both a revolving-door culture for most people, and as noted in some other reviews, nepotism for the folks who want to get to PPD. You will not make it to partner based on performance and client reviews, or even your book of business, unless you trip over some multi-million dollar opportunity. *WHO YOU KNOW* rules, and even that won't save you if you miss bare-minimum metrics, like "firm contribution". Lastly, if you are at all 'different', that is creative, innovative, bold, interesting, tattooed, pierced, artsy, talented in a niche, or otherwise don't look like the shiny happy faces you can see in Deloitte-posted videos, don't bother. They (honestly) do accept LGBT and folks of all colors/ancestry with grace and blind eyes. HOWEVER: Deloitte hires, retains, and promotes people who 'look'/think' like Deloitte. They want to claim to be 'innovative' and 'bold', but their DNA is an AUDIT/RISK FIRM, a TAX firm, and a FINANCIAL ADVISORY firm, even if they also do some consulting. Do the math. BEANCOUTER MENTALITY prevades. If you question the system enough times, or think you know a better way to do something, just bring your badge and laptop to a meeting with HR. There is no Hawaiian-Print Shirt Day, however you WILL be required to work, errr... ummm, I mean "volunteer" on some of your holidays to either do commuity service, or come to the office for all-hands meetings. Other reviews eloquently cover most of the ugly under-belly of this rat in shiny green-dot clothing. I spent seven years with Deloitte, and can tell you, she is most beautiful when viewed in the rear-view mirror, receding like a roadside snake-oil saleman in the desert distance behind me. Be warned. Most of the best I knew there have left, and the few that remain are eyeing the door. And God-forbid Deloitte is eyeing your firm for a Merger/Acquisition. Ugh.

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