Kroll reviews

3.5

59% would recommend to a friend

(1,741 total reviews)
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Jacob Silverman

60% approve of CEO

49% positive business outlook

Kroll has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 1,741 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Kroll 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

2K reviews
1.0
Sep 20, 2018

High Turnover

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Exposure to private equity deals.

Cons

Seasonality of workload causes a huge problem for work-life balance. Annual turnover while I was there averaged 40%, which is high for consultancies, but possibly in line with investment banking from what I hear.

1.0
Dec 20, 2011
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Access to projects If you are a associate you will have tremendous responsibility because the folks hire up won't be there for input.

Cons

Company culture changed when it went public from valuation firm to accounting firm. MD's who were not smart enough to carry their own weight or bring in decent business. MD's looked out only for themselves when company went public Company suffered when they change income generation from Associates with MBA's from top schools to Associates barely out of college with no experience. No diversity.

2.0
Aug 2, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Good comp for hours worked - Good WLB, not a very demanding job - Beautiful office - Argus experience - Exposure to different markets and asset classes - Work with name brand clients

Cons

- Zero work perks - Billable hour system - Unrealistic budgets for projects - No client engagement - Year end bonus was embarrassing. Some analysts worked a full year and were paid 2-3% of their salary despite the VAS group being one of the few profitable teams at the company - Office was a cubicle farm, rarely had corporate bonding events and there was zero sense of culture. In my last year, I started to detest going into the office just to sit at my computer all day and talk to nobody. Nobody adhered to the in-office requirement of three days per week. - Repetitive work, not intellectually challenging besides changing a cap rate based on a new sale. - You will have a hard time pivoting to the principal side after two years at the analyst level. The skills you gain as an appraiser are good but you have to make the effort in interviews to sell why you should be hired over someone with two years experience in acquisitions, asset management, development, etc. - I was overall unhappy and realized I did not want to spend any more time in valuation. Good place to start the career but not somewhere to stay forever. - Have to enter all time into time cards, which according to the head of the practice is the only thing that determines how good you are at your job and if you get promoted. - Make new hires think that this is a "valuation" role and not an appraiser role. You will not be helping firms with their acquisitions or consulting on new markets. You are appraising properties after they have already transacted. If the appraisal comes in low, then the client will have us change our assumptions to bring down the value, which has to be a violation of some sort of reporting policy as we are supposed to be "independent".

Viewing 52 - 54 of 1,741 Reviews

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