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 7, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

If you're looking to live the consultant life, this is the place to work. When it comes to presenting to clients, no one does it better than Deloitte. There is a huge variety of opportunities in client work and lots of chances to travel. If you like to network and are good at it, you can do very well here. Pay is quite good and the perks are great.

Cons

If you want to work hard and be valued for your talent, this is not the place for you. You will be promoted based on how much leadership likes you, not how skilled you are. You're in direct competition with your teammates for promotions, which leads to a very cutthroat and toxic work environment. Work-life balance is non-existent. For years Deloitte has been consistently named one of the best places to work for mothers, which is a joke. Yes, their maternity leave policy is very generous, but when you come back to work you'll never see your family again. There's a huge push to get involved in activities outside of client work (proposal writing, firm initiatives), to the point that if you aren't involved your annual review will suffer. And these activities count against your utilization rate, so good luck ever using all the PTO you earn. You will only do well here if your career is your entire life.

1.0
May 21, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Salaries are good, and you won't have to be bothered by things like human relationships, romance, or family, because you will have no opportunity whatever to pursue any of those old-fashioned things. You may as well tell your family right now that you won't be home for the holidays. Or weekends. Or very likely retirement, because you're not going to live that long.

Cons

As a transfer pricing senior manager in the Tysons, VA offices of Deloitte, I found myself immersed in a toxic culture of aloofness, narcissism, paranoia, and despair. The partners generally appear to hate one another, and treat each other as rivals. One in particular suffers obvious symptoms of mental disturbance, most likely narcissistic personality disorder. (Example: Her standard engagement letter actually includes braggadocio about her years as a Ph.D. student and her professional awards. What striking insecurity!) More generally, there is an endless rhetorical barrage about the importance of expressing honest disagreement and respect for diversity of opinion. That is nothing but institutional gaslighting. They are trying to get you to deny the reality that the only way to succeed is to agree with management, no matter how unethical, disrespectful, or ignorant their decisions might be.

1.0
Jan 25, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Benefits are decent, and holiday allowance is generous. The company does look after you in that respect, just not the most important things such as your well-being and job satisfaction. - Regular checks with new members of staff can be productive - Free fruit and coffee - Some in the ESC, and I say this with great caution, are lovely to work with and get to know. Unfortunately I cannot say that for all due to the terrible, pressurising cut throat corporate culture Management are encouraged to instil. - If you can play poker face and sing your praises about the company, then you will flourish and go far. There are a lot of great opportunities in Deloitte as a whole if you are an ambitious go getter, but the ESC is not one of them.

Cons

- Treated like a corporate drone - lack of sincere care, empathy and compassion for the work you do from Management. - Too much corporate lingo in the workplace - simplicity is key here in communication not being misinterpreted by the workforce. - The training, if you can call it that, is abysmal and non-existent, so do not expect much here until they pull their act together as a delivery centre (which in essence is a cost cutting exercise for the company). I actually had to speak up and request some sort of structure as it was that poor and lacklustre at the time, which you would think is really bad for a big 4 corporate conglomerate. - Training materials provided for you to learn were out dated and on many occasions required revising yourself. For a big corporation who emphasise so much on the quality and perfection of their work this is embarrassing and unprofessional. This was noticed by others in the workplace, so is not an individual opinion. - Job adverts are very generic and gloss over the details with hyperbole corporate jargon you would like to know about roles in the ESC - including day to day duties, the function/department, the actual job title advertised (very important) and salary. Needless to say, a lot of it is misleading, and recruitment forgets to tell you they can offer you and/or modify the job title as to their liking for where they think you are better suited to, which is not fair. It is clearly a numbers game to fill bums on seats for new intakes and a lack of good judgement. - Processes change not too often, but too quickly, resulting in frustration for new starters who think they have acquired the skills needed to carry out duties, adding to the insurmountable pressures of unrealistic deadlines set. - Lack of support from members of team due to the small size, the fast paced nature of the work, and colleagues too pressurised to provide support to new starters, which despite how neglected I felt by them and Management when raising these issues, actually felt sorry for them. - Major flaws in work culture - the common tale of the emphasis being on quantity of work and not quality; in order to squeeze as much as possible out of fewer 'non-chargeable' members of staff in a chaotic fashion, resulting in being over worked and underpaid. - Duties and general workload not reflective of salary pay packet. - Unsociable (some days - would a hello kill you in the morning?!), hostile work environment encouraging a miserable workplace, finger pointing blame culture, and a cloak and dagger one at that. Noticed some longer term members of staff there were suffering personally because of the ridiculous workloads assigned to them, and management turning a blind eye to it. - Strange company policies and procedures resulting in unhappy staff and work taking longer than it should. Too obsessive over the silly details. Any small to medium sized company would act on common sense, morals and decency, and not shirk responsibility for the welfare of their employees in turn for targets being made. - Concerns and/or feedback rarely gets taken on or addressed properly making you feel helpless, looking over your shoulder, and disheartened by Management. - One contact I reported to on my work was signed off during my time there which was not exactly awe inspiring for someone who already sensed early on that the sheer pressure and small team to carry out the work would cause burnout to any rational person. - The way staff feedback is delivered needs to be changed (which was admitted while I was there) because it is brutal and ruthless. A prime example of this involved me being asked permission from a higher member of staff to relay criticism to someone who had just returned to work after being signed off for a period of time. Dog eat dog - business ethics and decency here?

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