Pros
Flexible PTO A Hybrid Work Model
Cons
- Company does not address any concerns of it's staff Multiple employees have raised issues regarding pay equity, overwhelming client expectations, and non-compensation benefits. West Monroe's response to these complaints (if you even get one) will involve something like "We will address these in time" or "That's just the way it is". Yikes. - No pay transparency or equity. Some engineers are paid 30-40% more than others, and compensation is far below market rate for senior engineers. Salary bands are not published or accessible to employees, and are so wide on their job boards as to render them meaningless. - Bonuses are not guaranteed Bonuses are distributed arbitrarily. They *say* you *could* get 15% bonuses, but in actuality comes out to 3-4%. Clients praised my work and I "exceeded expectations" on my most recent annual review; I did not receive a bonus. - Lots of meetings, very little value. 95% of time spent must be billable to clients, but West Monroe will also bog you down with internal meetings. In a 40-hour work week, you will likely spend 15-20% of that time in internal meetings, so you are expected to work additional hours to make up for the lost client time. - Treated more like a number than a human employee West Monroe is a consulting machine. You're not well recognized for the work you do; you're seen more as a vessel for company profit. I cannot recall any point in time where me or my colleagues were recognized for our work. - No 401k Matching Well...Kinda. West Monroe makes a single lump sum matching contribution in March for the previous taxable year of work. However, you need to be actively employed through the entirety of the year in order to receive the match. IE, if you quit and your last day is December 14 , you receive no matching contribution for that year since you did not work through its entirety. Lastly, West Monroe feels a little culty. There are people who love the company which is great, but there are serious fundamental problems that are often overlooked. The company culture is vapid and disingenuous.