Accenture reviews

3.7

72% would recommend to a friend

(177,390 total reviews)
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Julie Sweet

72% approve of CEO

61% positive business outlook

Accenture has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 177,390 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Accenture employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Management & Consulting industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

177K reviews
2.0
Sep 30, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Paid better than average market rates for comparable large companies.

Cons

1.) Managing Directors don't bother getting to know Managers at all. Not even their names. If you're a Manager, you'll be totally overlooked, unless you do something wrong, which will ALWAYS filter back to your Managing Director, then they'll inquire who you are. 2.) If you do something wrong, no one will care why you did it or ask what happened. They won't care. They aren't your parents asking for an explanation. If you do something wrong, even if it's little, and insignificant - you're out. No discussion, no chance to tell "your" side of the story. No one will want to listen or care. Happened to me when I interrupted a speaking client to correct him when he was wrong after he asked me a question. Kicked right off the project for it. That was the only reason, per my superior Senior Manager. 3.) As a manager, you won't be managing anything or anybody. Period. The Managing Directors and Senior Managers will tell everyone what to do, and you have no input or say into it at all. That doesn't mean you won't be responsible for a lot. You will, and you will be held accountable. But you'll have no power or authority to do anything. If you need something, you have to ask your superior. If you need to know what to do or what to do next, ask your superior. No one will include you in any planning meetings. You may have a broad idea of what's going on, but no details. Get used to operating in the dark. It's going to happen a lot. 4.) You have to find your own jobs and projects. No one is going to take care of you. Better start talking to all kinds of people every chance you get and letting them know what your strengths and abilities are. Eventually you'll network around and find someone that can use you for something. Doesn't matter at all what you'd like to do. Only how useful you can be to someone or some project. 5.) Once you get on a project, keep your mouth firmly shut, and ears open. Never, ever, ever, ever say anything that could even remotely be implied as critical of any client or other colleague. Even if it's true, even if it's obvious. Especially to HR. 6.) Don't ever speak without being asked to. No one cares about your opinion unless they ask you, even if you're the only one that knows anything about what's being discussed, or are the only person with any experience in it. 7.) And, once you get on a project, you had better find a way to add value to the project, to your position on the project, to your tasks handed to you. You have to justify being there, otherwise you're dead weight and will get cut from the project without warning, very fast. Don't ever, ever think that at anytime at Accenture you aren't being watched, evaluated, or talked about by someone. You are. And you had better make sure it's positive. Watch your step every second, every day. You're on stage. 8.) Don't volunteer for anything. It's never, ever, ever going to go the way you think it is. No one will care that you volunteered, no one will appreciate it, no one will thank you or think better of you. It's not going to go on your record somewhere. It's a thankless job, and has the potential to be a minefield of things that will go wrong and make you look bad or worse, get you fired. There's a reason they're asking for job and task volunteers and can't find people. Experienced staff won't touch it, for good reason. 9.) Lastly, socialization. You are expected to attend Accenture gatherings, get-together's, and after work meals or social events with your colleagues. You had better go. But, this is a trap. It has the potential of being very bad for you. If you're too quiet, boring, dull, have no manners, are impolite, or do things others will think are stupid, you're in trouble. These events always have a mix of different Accenture employee levels, from Managing Directors down to the most entry level employee. From seasoned pro's to green hires. Be very careful in what you say and do. Your job is to leave people feeling good about you in a positive way. 10.) Don't ever ask anyone any question that you should have known by studying on your own. You should know Accenture hierarchy, employee levels, what people in each level are expected to do, all the different divisions and groups of Accenture, the values and corporate policies of Accenture, and much more. By heart. 11). Good luck. You'll need it.

3.0
Jul 18, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Pros for Accenture: - Great for networking (go to the company events) - Decent benefits -Yearly Evals and Bonuses -Matching 401k after one year -OK medical -Bench Period after project ends -Great variety of talent and mentors Accenture Flex -Great for entry level positions "first job" type positions -Good exposure with different kinds of clients

Cons

Cons for Accenture: - If you're looking for rapid career growth, this is not the company for you -Its such an established company that its difficult to be creative with solutions because the structures are pretty much set up when you join projects Cons for Accenture Flex -Advertised as FTE roles but there is a clear difference between Flex employees and regular Accenture -Management say that you can easily move to other projects but you have NO support from recruiting like regular Accenture employees do -No bench period -No stock options, does not match 401k -Conversations regarding career growth are limited to none -Management is all over the place and is so focused on client relationships that they forget about the people below them. There is no work life balance at all

1.0
Feb 24, 2019

Tech bro hell

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Hopefully got my worst corporate experience out of the way early working here. They somehow make it on the best places to work list every year yet there are a lot of articles about the awful experiences people have doing this work so must have an amazing PR team.

Cons

Team leads are basically grown up babysitters who’s job it is to micromanage the people actually doing work but literally nothing else. Seriously TLs don’t know how to do anything but get paid the most good luck trying to bring up real issues they’re more interested in making friendships and givings hugs then finding solutions for how awful people feel working here. You will never get promoted if you complain to your TLs about how they never do anything managerial. Can’t tell you how many times as a woman I was told I was dramatic and to chill out when trying to address issues. If you’re a male and have outbursts it’s cool you’ll get a promotion. Everyone and I mean EVERYONE knows how terrible being employed here is but they work on replacing people not taking care of anyone good at their job. The responsibly falls on a few good people to carry a project of about 20-30 with maybe 1 person getting compensated for their effort.

Viewing 37 - 39 of 177,390 Reviews

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