ERM reviews

3.5

62% would recommend to a friend

(1,917 total reviews)
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Sabine Hoefnagel

67% approve of CEO

48% positive business outlook

ERM has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 1,917 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The ERM employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Management & Consulting industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

2K reviews
1.0
Sep 10, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

1) Friendly, eager, and knowledgeable people at Project level and below - a fun-loving group that sticks together due to their common experience of not being treated very well by Partnership. 2) Diversity of projects if you can get your foot in the door of the managing person. 3) Flexible schedule, telecommuting is allowed at times. 4) Convenient office locations. 5) Overall knowledge base is good. 6) Gain some experience here (2 years if you can stand it), then take it to a company that will value this experience.

Cons

1) Pay is very low (below industry standard), raises are difficult to get, bonuses are promised but rarely materialize due to that ever-evasive bonus pool. 2) When bonuses do materialize, they fall far short of compensating for the overtime and personal time you have invested in the work. 3) There are training opportunities (some are MANDATORY), but expect to complete those on your own time or else it will count against your 100% billability goal. 4) HIGH turnover (at Staff, Project, and even Senior levels) and a Partnership that refuses to see this as an indication of trouble: "don't like it, there's the door." 5) Difficulty in getting into diverse project work due to staffing shortages - people leaving in droves means somebody has to take up the slack for the repetitive menial tasks; guess who that's going to be? 6) Insufficient time given to complete tasks: not only is everything due "yesterday", PICs will allow you 4 billable hours to complete a task that will take you 8 hours to complete - they are watching their bottom line and ensuring their bonus, not yours. 7) Very poor professional development tools, and little to no mentoring of employees, unless you are very lucky to have a Partner who will make himself available to you (very rare). 8) Minimal US holidays and sick days - expect to use vacation days if your kids are sick or have a school holiday; AND using these counts against your billable goal! Vacation time is average, but using these ALSO counts against your billable goal! 9) Little to no training for the basic office management tools (GMS, Workday, ECS, and so forth). 10) Little opportunity for advancement from within - they go outside to fill Senior level and higher positions. 11) 100% billable goal makes this company a SWEATSHOP consultancy, where people are consistently working 50+ hours for a salary calculated based on 40-hour work weeks. 12) Leading sustainability consultancy?!! Not even close. 13) Buzz words and slogans do not translate to action. 14) Very low morale; half of the people who were here when I started have left; people feel undervalued, disrespected, ignored or unappreciated. 15) Mistrust of Partnership, no transparency.

4.0
Aug 18, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You can do advisory and assurance work for the same client, phenomenal way to validate your own work Good upskilling place High turnover which makes you senior and experienced very quickly Good to join post retiring as no retirement age I increased the average by giving a 4. Hooray

Cons

1. Unethical practices, kickbacks and if you raise voice you are cut off overnight. No survey is ever anonymous. 2. Very few partners or none have survived who were hired in the past 3 years 3. Namesake partnership, older partners who don't sell nor retire are retained forever in made up Operational roles especially in North America 4. The previous global CEO was also let go, says it all. No one is permanent and kills morale 5. No use of technology at all, no process at all for data management, risk, quality management 6. You won't survive if you don't take operations roles or join through an acquisition or exceptional at bootlicking 7. No Afro American partners globally, North American leadership is as white you can imagine 8. Next year is transaction year so heavy firing at random will of operations folks who only look at excel and can't even sell a single dollar 9. No CFO survives the wrong doing that is happening behind the scenes, check annual report

1.0
Aug 26, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Paid on time Good colleagues, Partners until they're fired abruptly The firm does work with several Fortune 500 clients, which is a valuable experience. However, some have chosen to end their relationships with us due to quality issues and the lack of continuity in delivery teams — often a direct result of high turnover. There’s potential here, but the instability poses risks to both employees and client relationships

Cons

Please be aware of ongoing challenges within the organization. Frequent and abrupt terminations have not only affected employee morale but have also impacted client relationships and trust. This pattern of instability raises valid concerns. Parental leave, in particular, appears to be a sensitive issue. Employees who take maternity or paternity leave may face different forms of retaliation upon return — including unrealistic expectations to meet full performance metrics immediately. In some cases, if billable work is limited, individuals may be placed on Performance Improvement Plans (PIPs), leading to eventual exits. One notable example involved a Partner in the Manhattan office who, after taking parental leave and moving to a reduced workload to support the firm, ultimately left to join a Big 4 firm at a Director level — a step down in title but a step up in terms of supportive, family-friendly policies. More recently, another team member who informed the company of her upcoming maternity leave was terminated without clear justification. These actions are deeply disappointing and suggest a need for greater transparency and accountability. It would be helpful if the firm publicly shared retention data — for example, through the Global Reporting Initiative metric — showing how many employees remain with the company a year after taking parental leave. Treating people fairly and with respect should never be up for compromise.

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