Ryan reviews

4.1

87% would recommend to a friend

(1,953 total reviews)
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G. Brint Ryan

93% approve of CEO

85% positive business outlook

Ryan has an employee rating of 4.1 out of 5 stars, based on 1,953 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Ryan 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
3.0
Jun 28, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The flexible work schedule seems to keep most people at Ryan happy. Ryan has won plenty of awards to show that people, in general, have been happy to work at Ryan. The work is challenging and the bonuses, if earned, are pretty solid as well. Brint Ryan and the upper management is cognizant of the needs of the employees and acts on the feedback provided.

Cons

In my practice area (transaction tax compliance), promotions, accountability, and the management have been issues. Promotions: The metrics being used to decide whether or not someone is 'ready for the next step' don't apply well to TTC. Basically, if the principal or director assigns you a client, it's out of your control whether or not it's a large revenue generator or profitable. I'd like to say it's the luck of the draw, but based on the fact that a bunch of cliquey women run TTC, one gender is clearly favored. I've never seen a male get promoted beyond Senior Consultant, which is sad because most leave to pursue actual growth and ultimately thrive elsewhere. Accountability: As part of orientation at Ryan, we see the bonus structure and how lucrative it can be. Anyone below a director has no bearing over the bonus. Thought you were earning a bonus for supplying marketing support and contact information? Think again. Management: TTC has been noted as having a 'revolving door' of employment because of the amount of turnover. It's no secret that when a handful of people leave in January (the busiest filing month), they do it on purpose. The management (principals, directors, managers, team leads) refuse to acknowledge there's a problem with their leadership. Treat people like garbage because they aren't in your clique and they're going to leave, every time. Happy hours and mandatory team outings aren't going to fix morale, respect will.

1.0
Mar 21, 2023

Crooked.

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Ryan provides a good illusion that they care about their employees, so it's reassuring when you are starting out on the job.

Cons

The company is twisted and employees livelihoods sit in the palm of their managers hands. If your manager just doesn't like you for ANY reason, not even work related, you're terminated no questions asked. No training provided, but you are expected to know exactly what needs to be done and don't forget to make sure everything you do meets compliance!!! If you do not know the company compliance standards, try to figure it out! To get one task accomplished by a deadline, prepare an extra 30 days in advance because to get anything approved, even the smallest thing, must go up an approval chain of 90 people all the way up to the CEO. And if the task has an urgent deadline, you're screwed because the CEO and his team do not bend over backwards for anyone and you are the one punished for not completing something in a timely manner. OH and make sure you stay there for at least one year, because when they fire you before, you will have to repay the home office benefit they provide new employees with to set up their home office and that is deducted from your 2 weeks of severance pay after they fire you out of thin air. Complete joke.

1.0
Jun 8, 2018

Terrible Compensation System

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You can work from home sometimes depending on what team you are on.

Cons

They try to sell you the fact that this is an entrepreneurial environment and the sky is the limit when it comes to bonuses. The reality is that below the senior management you have no control over what projects your team gets and what you are put on. The staff gets to split a whopping 3% of the fee you get after the client pays you. It can takes years for that to actually happen. The base salary is much lower than you can get at other firms and they will continually promise you that the bonuses will make up for it when in reality it will probably only happen for a select few who happened to get put on some big projects but the vast majority will likely never see the type of bonuses that would even get you to the standard base salary at other firms. This is not a good system for the tax industry and although "innovative" there is a reason why other firms don't do this. Don't believe the promises of "Sky is the limit!" and you get rewarded on merit because the reality is it is luck of the draw what projects you get and there are many teams not pulling in any big fees.

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