EY reviews

3.6

70% would recommend to a friend

(83,787 total reviews)
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Janet Truncale

79% approve of CEO

60% positive business outlook

EY has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 83,787 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 Financial Services industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

84K reviews
3.0
Jul 21, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Maternity/Paternity leave - 16 weeks 1 extra paid day off with every major holiday (excluding Christmas & New Year). For example, if July 4th falls on a Monday, you get paid the Friday before that Monday off. You also get the actual holiday off (paid). Fitness reimbursement up to $500 a year. The company is socially responsible. It supports organizations like the United Way, American Heart Association, March of Dimes and so on.

Cons

The pay scale sucks for those at the staff level. The best thing to do is to not accept a bad offer when you get hired. It's hard to get a decent increase in pay when you start low. When you move from one department to another, they consider it a lateral move and keep you at the same pay (even when the rank is obviously higher).

2.0
Mar 30, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

EY on my resume allowed me to transition to a fulfilling PM role with a different consulting firm Learned a lot on engagements Lots of talented people Great industry exposure IF staffed at quality clients Great networking opportunities Prestige of working at EY Although I am about to rant on the leadership below, there were also some great Senior Managers and Partners peppered throughout the firm that I met and worked with.

Cons

A culture of bullying, misogyny, backstabbing, politics and fear emanated from the top of my particular practice. I was personally verbally berated by the megalomaniac lead partner on multiple occasions as were all others from Senior Managers on down. Everyone was scared of this individual but HR was in his pocket and no one dared say a word. This culture was pervasive and accepted as status quo. The circle of partners and aspiring Senior Managers was very much an old boys club. You had to fit in to get in, and that included going to dinners where you needed to be sure to order the largest steak possible, demean women, drink bottles and bottles of red wine followed by after dinner shots, whiskies and drinks, and make it back to your hotel room hoping not to die from alcohol poisoning. EY makes no apologies for the Advisory travel requirements, and that is fair enough, but at the same time, they make no efforts to accommodate when life events happen (again at least in my practice). Having a baby? Ok take a week off and get back on the road. Consultants from the west coast were staffed on the east coast and vice versa. It is impossible to have a family and be a decent parent if you are in EY advisory practice. You are a cog in the machine. Once you are staffed in a certain profitable practice, you will not be able to transfer laterally. This has been said many times, but the workload can be pretty absurd. After flying out Monday morning at 4 AM and returning late Thursday or sometimes late Friday, Partners and Engagement Managers will have no qualms making you work through the weekend full time for weeks on end to meet deadlines. The upper echelons of the firm are very clubby. If you do not kiss up and become a lackey to the appropriate people (err I mean 'build your brand') you stand little chance of climbing the ranks.

3.0
Jul 1, 2015

Not all it's said to be

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great people, great offices, some partners are truly awesome Benefits are great! Lots of food

Cons

Sink or Swim type attitude although they say when you're hired that you will go through 3 phases. Runs too lean. Over 300 employees and only have 5 EA's for the office. Manager is very disconnected from the EA's. Too much work, tons of overtime, everyone gets flexibility except the EA's. Not much training, expected to figure it out.

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