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Edelman Financial Engines

Engaged Employer

Edelman Financial Engines reviews

3.4

55% would recommend to a friend

(484 total reviews)
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Ralph Haberli

35% approve of CEO

44% positive business outlook

Edelman Financial Engines has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 484 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Edelman Financial Engines 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

484 reviews
5.0
Sep 16, 2016

Lives up to it's 'Great Places to Work' status!

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Level of Difficulty. I was hired for a job I am capable of handling. I am encouraged to continue gaining additional knowledge and challenging myself. - Autonomy. However, my manager is extremely supportive and always available to provide guidance. -Social Interactions. All of my colleagues are friendly, helpful, and seem like they enjoy their jobs. Others introduce themselves willingly. The company will often provide free swag and lunch or my colleagues will get together for lunch. There are many other company-sponsored or property mgmt related activities such as ice cream days, bbq lunches, book signing, and holiday celebrations. - Physical Environment. Great work space, access to updated technology (hardware & software), free garage parking, free gym on-site. Free coffee/tea/cocoa/water, vending machines, and plenty of kitchen space. Top floor has a beautiful view of Fairfax and surrounding areas. - Salary and Benefits. I am compensated fairly (including annual discretionary bonus). Benefits are comparable to other companies out there (i.e. medical/dental/vision coverage; 401k match, PTO + bday off). Other perks include on-going training and education/tuition reimbursement, access to free financial planning, gym discount, charity donation match, 4 wk paid sabbatical, 10 yr Rolex, free flu shots, and free Wolf Trap & baseball tickets.

Cons

Room for improvement (since you asked): - more town hall meetings - better maternity leave - unlimited PTO or remote work options - laptop or cell phone reimbursements - gym reimbursement (rather than discount) - add additional retail discounts - start a company team (trivia, softball, soccer, bowling, bocce, etc.)

4.0
Sep 10, 2016

Place of opportunity

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Stress free environment, good people to work with specially management

Cons

Some kiss up people that ruin it for the others

4.0
Sep 4, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I joined Financial Engines in 1999. At that time, it was still a startup trying to find its footing. Its product, revolutionary in those days, was an online retirement investing self-help tool powered by algorithms that were pretty sophisticated for the time. That product never really did catch on; however, the company made a very successful pivot in the early 2000s toward 401(k) management and today is the largest independent registered investment adviser in the country. Now the 401(k) side of the business manages over $100 billion of assets, with over 900,000 individual customers. Revenue in 2015 was over $300 million. We still have the sense of mission that founded the company: use technology to deliver premium-grade financial services to people who otherwise would be unable to afford them. We still have a number of people with 10+ years with the company who were instrumental in building it. We have very solid financials. We value each other's dignity and respect. I've had my own frustrations working here over the years, but the mission and culture of the company are why I still come to work each day energized to do better. The acquisition of The Mutual Fund Store adds a network of branch offices and human advisers specialized in face-to-face financial planning. Now we're traditional retail plus 401(k) workplace. It's no sure thing that we'll be able to harmonize the two organizations, but it seems like a bet worth taking. It's not too hard to imagine Financial Engines becoming a household name in a few years.

Cons

The downsides of working here are what you should expect at a 20-year-old profitable company: technical debt, disagreements over priorities, and an ongoing tension between trying new things versus investing in what has worked before. And I'll add one more downside, which is why I'm writing this review in the first place: we do not seem to do a good job managing the expectations of new coworkers. "Technical debt" sounds like a bad thing and, sure, usually it is a bad thing. However, realize that it's the price you pay afterward for decisions made in the past. We didn't aggressively modernize our tech stack over the years because it wasn't necessary to grow. How we grew was to become the dominant 401(k) managed account provider--that meant making our code base complicated enough to service 600+ different retirement plans. But that code base generated over $300 million in revenue in 2015, so cut our execs some slack when you read complaints about seasoned technologies. As for the criticisms that we have no strategy, I don't quite believe that we got to be the managed account provider for 600 retirement plans by accident. Working at a startup can be very exciting and engaging (and stressful). A startup is always trying out new things. There's no existing business to protect, so big risks are justified and there are no legacy systems to trip over. When you move fast and break stuff, there's very little to break so fixing the breakage is easy. FE is not a startup. We're regulated by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Breaking stuff can cause real damage that doesn't always fix easily. So, like other 20-year-old companies, there’s a tension here between trying out new things and being careful not to endanger the existing business. There are a lot of people here whose jobs are to make sure the existing business runs smoothly. New ideas that don't accommodate their concerns will fail. And newcomers who can't navigate the organization will fail. One of my biggest frustrations is seeing newcomers (from individuals to executives) arrive with big plans to change everything without understanding the business or the organization. They typically flail for a year or two and then flame out. And write critical reviews of us, some of it justified, without ever seeing the big picture. Sorry, this is not a “greenfield” place in certain ways—greenfields generally don’t make $300 million in revenue. If you read the most negative reviews, they seem to be written by people who experienced a switcheroo between what they expected their jobs would be and what ended up happening. It seems to me we could do better at setting expectations up front. Especially in Product Management and Engineering, on the front lines of that tension between trying new things and managing the existing business, we need to do better. We welcome new energy and ideas. We need people to show us how it’s done in other places. Just be understanding, okay? The mission here is to help regular people manage their investments and plan for retirement, not to prototype some sick new disruptive technology and sell out to Facebook. If the mission doesn’t speak to you, this may not be the best place for you.

Viewing 373 - 375 of 484 Reviews

Glassdoor has 516 Edelman Financial Engines reviews submitted anonymously by Edelman Financial Engines employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Edelman Financial Engines is right for you.