Incompetent and Racist Management - Associate Infosys Employee Review

1.0
May 17, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The first month of training (Python) was enjoyable and informative.

Cons

Almost all management in US hubs is imported from India. There is a giant lack of understanding of American culture. When looking around the company you will find almost no one in a management position is white, black, or even hispanic. Management expects you to be working 24/7 and be ready at a moments notice. I have received emails at 11:00pm telling me to be in the office early the next morning. I should not have to check my email after working hours to receive critical messages such as these. There have been several instances during my tenure here, of American associates being pulled off of projects in favor of Indian consultants. In one instance, an associate with an Indian sounding name was put onto a project, simply because of his name. He had no qualifications or experience working on the project. Once the team/managers learned he was not Indian, he was immediately pulled from the team and replaced with another unqualified Indian associate. If you were to ask around the Indianapolis hub, most American employees would confirm that they have been subject to incidents such as these, or witnessed them. The general consensus among associates is that Indian employees are valued much higher than American employees. Rumor at the hubs is that the company is going on an American hiring spree just to combat and squash rumors of racism within the company. The bottom line is that even in the United States, there is a disproportionate number of Indian to American employees. This disproportion is even larger in management. I have personally fallen victim to managers who have not shown up to scheduled meetings. This has happened to me personally, three times. After every missed meeting I have sent emails to both HR and the manager stating that the manager was not present for the meeting. I was once scolded by the manager for this. I have been witness to associates on bench for up to a year because management is unable to find work for them in the geographic location assigned to those associates. Management expects those associates to come into the office for eight hours a day with nothing to work on. You are suggested to use their buggy internal training system while on bench, to learn new technologies or brush up on old technologies. However their internal system is incredibly buggy, outdated, and contains poor information and bad software development practices. There is also an expectation for you to work in extremely niche fields. They use predatory recruiting tactics to recruit recent college grads to come work here. Once they are here, they are trained in incredibly niche technologies such as ABAP or SAP development. These skills and experience does not translate well to life after Infosys and is almost useless. I have spoken with several recruiters and hiring managers at other companies that will agree, these technologies are incredibly niche, and are really bad things for newer grads to be working in this early in their career.

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5.0
Feb 14, 2026
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Pros

lot of learning opportunities for career growth

Cons

location contraints and we were not able to find many projects

4.0
Jun 10, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
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Pros

Job stability – Infosys is known for long-term employment and steady projects. Strong brand value – Having Infosys on your resume adds credibility and global recognition. Good learning opportunities – Access to internal learning platforms, certifications, and training programs (especially for freshers). Global exposure – Opportunities to work with international clients and global delivery teams. Structured processes – Well-defined policies, documentation, and governance. Work-life balance (project dependent) – Many teams offer reasonable working hours. Employee benefits – Health insurance, paid leaves, and wellness initiatives. Safe and inclusive workplace – Strong focus on ethics, compliance, and diversity.

Cons

Salary growth can be slow – Compensation increments may be lower compared to market standards. Limited flexibility in role changes – Internal mobility and project switches can take time. Bureaucratic processes – Decision-making can be slow due to multiple approval layers. Project allocation delays – Bench time and delayed onboarding to projects can happen. Variable learning exposure – Skill growth depends heavily on the project assigned. Less innovation in some teams – Certain projects may use legacy technologies. Onsite opportunities are limited – Compared to earlier years, onsite roles are fewer. Performance appraisal transparency – Rating systems may feel rigid or unclear.

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