Consultant - graduate scheme at Sia Partners - Consultant Sia Employee Review

5.0
Feb 4, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Rotational programme across 4 practices (Banking, Energy, Business transformation, Growth & Innovation) - which gets you to experience different practices and styles of working from more corporate to more innovative and entrepreneurial. Overall company culture is good, a mixture of corporate structure and can-do start up attitude where employees can have input and make a business case for something they want e.g business development or any suggestion Very quick senior exposure, working directly with senior managers, directors or partners and developing client relationships Very good work/life balance depending on project and project stage

Cons

Average industry pay for the grad scheme

Explore other reviews about Sia

5.0
Jun 8, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great team and interesting projects

Cons

Low comp compared to other consulting firms

1
1.0
Mar 24, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Depending on the business unit, you can find supportive, friendly colleagues. There is a strong sense of camaraderie at the peer level, which makes day-to-day work more pleasant. - There is also a relatively good work-life balance overall. However, it is sometimes unclear whether this is the result of a genuine company culture that prioritizes balance, or rather a consequence of inconsistent planning and organization, which can lead to periods of under- or over-allocation. - Decent healthcare benefits

Cons

- Clear lack of structure and transparency, particularly regarding promotions, bonuses, and compensation adjustments. Processes are inconsistent, often unclear, and sometimes feel arbitrary. In several cases, expected salary adjustments were delayed, minimized, or only granted after persistent follow-up. Bonuses are not always proactively distributed and may require employees to explicitly chase them. - Favoritism is a concern, with recognition and advancement not always based on merit. The culture at higher levels can sometimes feel unprofessional, with blurred boundaries that create discomfort. - Long-term employees tend to feel undervalued over time. Many leave after around two years, often because they see a very limited progression. - Overall impression that the company tends to optimize costs at the expense of employees whenever possible, which affects trust and long-term engagement. - Leadership tolerates or fails to address inappropriate, unprofessional, or toxic behaviors. It can go unchecked for years, with action only taken very late, sometimes for reasons unrelated to the misconduct..

3
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