EY reviews

3.7

70% would recommend to a friend

(83,922 total reviews)
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Janet Truncale

79% approve of CEO

60% positive business outlook

EY has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 83,922 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The EY employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Finance industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

84K reviews
4.0
Sep 5, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Left Accenture to join the EY Advisory practice.. Very different culture and experience thus far.. The Good: - Great people culture - External training opportunities - Performance recognition - people actually move up the ranks - Accessibility to senior leadership - Networking - If you're a social butterfly... EY is the place for you. - Milestone Recognition - 1 week training in Orlando FL (Universal Studios) for new managers and senior mgrs ; 1 week training/celebration in Orlando FL ( Disney world) at end of summer - Easy to stand out for Type A personalities

Cons

The Bad: - Archaic technology, applications, tools - More Sales driven > Less competency focus: in an effort to compete w/ low cost providers, EY mgmt has pursued more staff augmentation roles versus. true advisory opportunities to hit sales targets. This behavior puts managers and more junior resources at a disadvantage when developing core competencies in respective domains. The Ugly: - Long, long hours - Work life balance is very tough - Horrible health/dental benefits - Incompetent deployment staff - the process for Advisory engagement staffing needs serious work. The only way to find your next engagement is through networking w/ partners. If you can't do this well, you'll be at a disadvantage. It would be great to have a tool like other Big4 firms w/ shows engagement pipeline. - FY13 performance-based bonus model: the new PBB model didn't give the same bonus % as previous model. - Restricting employees to 40 hours per week - when most work 60 hours. The partners will sell engagements with fixed time and materials. It isn't fair since utilization is everything in consulting.

2.0
Jun 14, 2021

Forget you have a life

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good leave policy. Good Salary.

Cons

Please note that this review is for EY GDS, IT section. If you are an IT engineer and also into share market wont recommend here other auditing firms as there are limitations. Here gds cant really get into projects and they are like support for other EY locations. The work life balance is pure hell. The managers always want you to work 24*7 in any technology they demand as if you are a genie from some fantasy movie. They never recognise if you are setting proper work timing and planning as a well organized employee. They always demand more and more. And sadly there are people who are okay with these Toxicity and we get compared to them and get labelled as low key resource even if we deliver things on time. They also ask you to work in multiple projects at same time to show demos or stuffs which a not a common scenario in any place. And that too you are a developer but expectations are sky high. Also forget your skills, you would be put in any random works like one week you are in UI the next you are a tester and it goes on. Wouldn't recommend as a place for career growth

1.0
Aug 3, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

It is based out of Cleveland where the living expenses are low

Cons

This review is specific to the ISAC (IT Shared Analysis Center) team in Cleveland, OH Modern day slavery – quantity of work you do is given maximum importance. You are bribed with terms like “Green card” and “Promotion”, but deemed “not good enough for this” and screwed over during year-end review process No career growth – The kind of work you do here can be done by 10th grade students. No degree is required to convert text to excel, correct spelling mistakes on files, re-order columns on excel. Their actual “technical” work is anything but technical – Clicking buttons to generate reports, copy paste existing code and change spellings, “Configure” environments (Fancy terminology for changing ON to OFF) No work life balance – your private cell phone number is taken for emergencies but you are constantly contacted at odd times of the day and weekends for unimportant stuff in the name of “deadlines” that don’t exist Toxic work environment – People are always angry, unhappy, spiteful or in tears Poor work structure – Multiple projects with different types of tasks causing each person to work for 12 – 13 hours a day just to get 9 hours of billable time. Lot of time wasted in unwanted documentation, waiting on responses from clients/managers, switching times to mentally prepare for a new task, thrown into a project and later expected to learn what it is about (learning times not counted as billable time therefore having to work extra hours a day/night). Complete disaster No flexibility – There is nothing remotely Ernst & Young like about this team. You have no flexibility to work from home unless you have a physical disability that is causing you to be immobile. You HAVE to work physically from the office even though every other person you work with is working from different parts of the country. The team works primarily out of Cleveland, OH (That in itself should have been enough reason not to join this team), you will not be allowed to change your work location until you reach manager level. If finally you decide that this team is not meant for you and request for an internal transfer, you will face one of the following: 1. Blocked from transferring and forced to continue working for that team 2. Transfer approved for 12 months in the future 3. Fired. You just have to take your chance Please reconsider before you join this team. The name Ernst & Young might be lucrative, but this team is an anomaly to the organization. The management has a really twisted mentality and will play you and squeeze every bit of life from you in the name of “Utilization”. Your concerns will NEVER be addressed and your career progress will remain stagnant. Worst decision of my life. Truly traumatic experience.

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