Deloitte reviews

3.8

74% would recommend to a friend

(114,771 total reviews)
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Joe Ucuzoglu

83% approve of CEO

65% positive business outlook

Deloitte has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 114,771 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 & Consulting industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

115K reviews
2.0
Jun 27, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Deloitte Consulting is a great place to start a career for those just graduating from college. Those who rise up from the analyst level are able to better work the system at Deloitte, compared to experienced hires. Also, as a market leader in quite a few industries, Deloitte has a great variety of clients and is able to provide a rich experience across industries and technologies to its practitioners. You'll be able to work in an area of your own choosing, within reason. People are generally nice, and there are some truly spectacular people within the firm, those who take the time to mentor you and bring out the best in you. Upper management (Senior Managers, Partners, Principals, Directors) are also generally very accessible. Compensation is pretty good, until you take into account the items I mention in the Cons section. Vacation time is generous at 5 or 6 weeks, 401k matching, Deloitte contributed pension plan, and an annual incentive program (bonus), along with other benefits and perks. You'll also be able to earn airline miles and hotel points, and do "alternative travel" instead of flying home on weekends. There is a firm-wide initiative to establish a "Big Firm, Small Feel" to Deloitte, providing flexibility and predictability to Deloitte practitioners. Work-life balance has been a hot topic within Deloitte. This initiative is a pro, as Deloitte leadership recognizes this is a problem, but it is also a con as I'll describe below. Deloitte can be a great place to work, especially for those that are competitive, self-motivated and have the drive to advance through the ranks.

Cons

To succeed at Deloitte, you'll need to: 1. Give up any semblance of a normal life. Expect to put in 50-60hours per week on client engagements, at the very least. If you are on an technology implementation with an offshore team, expect your evenings to be sacrificed to dealing with offshore developers. Weekend work is also a possibility, depending on the schedule of your client engagement or other firm activities that are on your place. Also, expect to travel. Whether that's commuting by car because you're on a "local" project or by plane/train, traveling Sun/Mon - Thurs is the expected routine for most Consulting practitioners. 2. Network, network network. If you are not naturally good at selling yourself, you'll need to figure out a way around that real quick. The only way to get on projects quickly is based on the strength of your network. A Resource Manager is assigned to you, and there is an internal project search site, but the best roles are usually staffed before they even appear on the project search system. Where you build your network is also important, as they'll need to be able to speak up for you during consensus meetings. Having a big network in the East in a different service line will not necessarily help you to get that great rating. 3. Contribute to firm activities. On top of your 50-60 hour work week, you’ll need to contribute to the firm in some other way, whether it is by working on pursuits, eminence activities, or other firm initiatives. There’s no way around this. You’ll quickly notice that those who excel at Deloitte Consulting either have no life because they spend all their time working, or they’ve found a PPD/SM who has taken a shine to them and is able to protect them during mid-year and year-end. 4. Find a PPD/SM who you trust, get along with well, and takes a liking to you. Preferably, this PPD/SM will be in the same service line and region as you, so they’ll be in your consensus meetings. Preferably a PPD/SM that is well connected, so they can help you grow your network and ensure that you are staffed on good projects and good roles. With that said – although you are given 5 to 6 weeks of PTO, it would be impossible to take all of your allocated PTO every calendar year without impacting your utilization. Only client work explicitly counts toward your utilization, so taking PTO while on a project means you are not being utilized. I believe the utilization year is based on a 2000 hour year. You can do the math. While Deloitte is a market leader in quite a few industries and has top level partnership with several technology providers, they’re not doing enough to ensure those coming up the ranks have the specialized industry knowledge that is required to excel in a specific industry. Practitioners do not choose an industry specialization until the manager level, so may end up working across multiple industries during their formative years at Deloitte. Also, once you are pigeon-holed into a particular technology, it is very hard to branch out to other tools, even though they may be very similar in nature. There is also now a tendency to staff off-shore (India) and/or near-shore resources on projects due to cost. There may be one or two functional resources actually at the client site, while there could be a whole group of developers who work half way around the world. Depending on the resources, you’re in for long nights as most off-site resources will lack the functional and business understanding behind requirements, and the actual build may suffer as a result. You’ll have to be able to review the work offshore does with a fine tooth comb depending on the team you’ve got. The “Big Firm, Small Feel” initiative, in my experience, has not done anything to help with work-life balance. This initiative was supposed to encourage projects to schedule work from home weeks, limit time spent on offshore calls, ensure that PTO can be taken as “personal time off” and not “pretend time off”, and to introduce a measure of predictability in practitioners schedules. However, in practice, this initiative, IMHO, has not met its objectives. Being able to work from home is highly dependent on the client, as some clients need to see its consultants onsite every Monday to Thursday. Off-shore calls are unavoidable for most of us, and due to the shuttle schedule offshore, late evening calls are unavoidable. PTO, even if taken, will have a direct impact on utilization. Unless you are on a long term project where you can plan your PTO against project deadlines, it’ll be very hard to get PTO approved. Basically, while the ideas and objectives behind this initiative are good, the implementation of it is truly lacking.

1.0
May 13, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The best thing by far is the work. You will be exposed to complex client issues that will challenge you to solve. The second best part of the job are the clients. The clients who hire Deloitte have bought into the hype (or just need a big four opinion) and will look to you to help solve their problems. You will get opportunities to shape some of the countries top companies.

Cons

Where to start? The corporate structure of Deloitte is based on working the staff and Managers to death in order to create maximum profitability to the firm. While that is not a surprise to anyone who knows this business, the not so well known part is that all the money goes directly to the Partners pockets. Deloitte which once paid people well and attracted good talent now pays at or less than industry but the hours are endless and the job is becoming thankless. The mantra is wait till you make Partner, you will make big bucks then. Until then, forget your life, your worth any your self esteem. Its all about making the Partners rich. So how does Deloitte continue to get rated a top place to work despite ranking dead last in work life balance in a recent poll of Fortune 500 companies? Great marketing and specialized benefits for a small few that the company can tout to the ranking firms. You, however, will not see great benefits. What you will see is a pathetic 401-K plan which basically contributes nothing to your retirement (again they say wait until you make Partner, the pension benefit is awesome - for the lucky few), a generous PTO plan that you can never use (by the way taking vacation actually counts AGAINST your metrics), and an Independence policy is more invasive than a colonoscopy (they can actually make you refinance your home if you have a mortgage from a firm they feel conflicts you - if you have a good mortgage rate but work in an office that has a relationship with the underwriter you will be refinancing at a higher rate - the firm just doesn't care about your financial situation or the negative impact these decisions can have). So if you still want to come work here, know this, your career progression will have little to do with your abilities or your success and 99% to do with how well you play office politics. Cozy up to a Partner to champion you in the firm and do anything he or she wants for the 7-10 years it will take to make you a Partner. If you truly have any talent you will get your money in the market, if you have mediocre talent and do not see anyway that you will make a lot of money in your career and that is important enough to you to go into indentured servitude for several years, check out Deloitte. It could make you rich but it will definitely make you a bad person.

1.0
Apr 30, 2015

Horrible company to work

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Decent Facilities, good colleagues, PTO if you can take them.

Cons

One of the worst places to work despite all the hype about being the top places to work. .. Management and HR is very political and conniving. Mid managers are the worst, they have nothing to do, just inflated titles and big talk, while micromanaging the employee... Big talk at big meetings but no action on the ground. Treats long term employees shabbily. Could be years before you even get considered for promotion as it has a relic queue system. Is the worst place to be.

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