EY reviews

3.7

70% would recommend to a friend

(83,904 total reviews)
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Janet Truncale

79% approve of CEO

60% positive business outlook

EY has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 83,904 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The EY 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

84K reviews
3.0
Aug 1, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

EY has really good benefits, you can work from home, good work/life balance, some really nice people and compensation is competitive. If you don't care about working on inspirational design work and want a good paycheck then this is the place for you.

Cons

- As a designer I can say that this is not a great design culture. A lot of the technology you will use is dated (they just got Macs for designers in Summer 2017 and Sketch) which means to complete a lot of tasks you have to use a Windows VM to do things like log your timecard, access the EY intranet etc. Speaking of, there are frequent issues with your email, Skype (or Lync from 2011 which is what you use on Macs) so anticipate spending a part of your day on the phone with IT consistently. This is not an exaggeration, outages happen about once every month to month and a half. TOO MANY MEETINGS. I can't say that enough. There's some days where I've been on meetings 6-8 hours. This is unacceptable for a designer that is supposed to be producing. A lot of the times meetings just drag on and they're not very focused. This isn't something that is going to change at EY as it's a part of their culture. - The design work is boring. If you're a creative designer, working in tax is a snooze-fest. There's only so many ways you can slice forms, text fields and tables. If you're looking to work on cutting edge design then this probably isn't the place. - Rules and regulations that have nothing to do with design. You have to do frequent testing on topics about finance and tax. If you are a client-serving team even if you aren't working with a client directly and you're not in any form of tax or auditing role you will be forced to sell stocks, bonds, etc. if they are clients EY serves. Same goes for your spouse. This seems unnecessary for a role that will never touch financial data. - A lot of the EY engineering teams you work with to put it simply are not good. I've ran in to situations where things that have been standards as far as a responsive design or some sort of animation could not be done because the developer couldn't do it. We're talking interactions that have been done for 5-6 years. This makes your job as a designer difficult because you're crippled by developers that are up to today's standards. They need to hire more developers that aren't all off-shore too.

5.0
Jun 21, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The company is very flexible with work schedules to help employees have a work / life balance. Benefits are great, good salary. Can't say enough good things about the firm. I loved working there.

Cons

My work for my PPEDD's was sent to "NEAT" in Kentucky.

1.0
Apr 11, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Meet some nice people

Cons

1. Below average pay 2. Bad culture - Focused on getting to $50b in revenue and getting ahead of competition. In the process, below average people are hired and culture is diluted.

Viewing 139 - 141 of 83,904 Reviews

Glassdoor has 114,744 EY reviews submitted anonymously by EY employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if EY is right for you.