"Common Sense Is All Too Uncommon At AIG" - Financial Analyst AIG Employee Review

2.0
Feb 9, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- More competitive benefits package for current workers than is offered by the Industry. - Work-From-Home option given (if needed). - Lower-tiered managers/team leads are responsive to staff concerns/input. - Opportunities are given to transition laterally across the organization if satisfaction is not found with current segment.

Cons

- The Biggest Con - objectively and literally - is the Forced Rankings System (FRS), whereby employees are judged against those of their same grade level across different teams. Additionally, there are only a fixed number of rankings to give (i.e. 10 As, 20 Bs, 30 Cs, etc.). In other words, you could deliver superior quality work compared against your entire team, yet still receive an inferior ranking because the maximum number of As, Bs, and Cs had been reached. In a way, it's like playing Yahtzee, where the higher value spaces are already taken, so you're pigeon-holed into playing for the lower value ones. - The 2nd Biggest Con is that management is very keen on "enhancing efficiency" (i.e. cutting cost, raising profit) by transferring as many functions overseas as quickly as possible. For now, it's the more 'menial tasks' (low-severity issue resolution), because that team is still relatively inexperienced. However, the 'Great Onshore Concern' is that the overseas team will take on the larger tasks once it gains more experience. Management has remained curiously mum on that point. - The 3rd Biggest Con is that none of the lower managers/team leads place any emphasis on proper project planning for any task - great or small. This results in poor utilization of resources, cost-overruns, late deliveries, a burnt out staff (that was never properly staffed to begin with), and angry reactions all around. - Following #3, the 4th Biggest Con is that none of the staff have any knowledge of or appreciation for proper project management methodologies. Everyone wants to immediately start execution of a task without ever planning the work. That results in the above-outcomes in #3 roughly 99% of the time, with either "too many chiefs, and not enough Indians," or a scenario of "the inmates running the asylum."

Explore other reviews about AIG

5.0
Jun 21, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Everyone was very friendly and helpful if I ran into an issue.

Cons

Seasonality of work - slower after the summer rush until the end of the year.

3.0
Jun 22, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

AIG pays well. Pretty good benefits package & bonus structure.

Cons

The work is wild at AIG! Also, there are ALOT of people at AIG so, everybody has to weigh in on everything you do...keeping you bottlenecked in your work flow. AIG is not the place for a brand new, entry level adjuster breaking into the commercial space and they pretty much only hire experienced people HOWEVER, it does not matter-management will not trust your experience therefore, there is little to no autonomy! You will find yourself touching the same thing 3 or 4 times because your always waiting on permission or someone else's opinion on something, etc. You got to get permission to send for conflict check, got to get an opinion to answer a demand, a tender, an ROR ltr. .. they pounce on defense counsel's hourly rate to be cheap with them which makes them work w/less efficiency...dragging the claim out so they can get their billable hours. You will work your fingers to the bone for that good pay & you will be frustrated and exhausted, ALL THE TIME!...The environment is pretty stuffy w/a very high stress level, (especially with long time AIG employees who definitely drink the "kool-aid" and think they are hot stuff). They will keep you in dumb meetings on your claims all the time presenting your claims with everyone scared to make a decision plus, they never want to pay the claims, they are cheap as hell. They will make you have to scramble at a mediation to get more money even though you told them what you needed when they forced you to present the same claim to 3 different people before the mediation date. To me, management are glorified overseers who still handles the claim...they just tell you what to do or, they come behind you and second guess everything. And, they are trying to enforce 3 days in-office a week (which is hell for ATL traffic) plus, it's crowded on the elevator (which seems to get stuck more often than what I am comfortable with) and trying to find a desk when everyone decides to come in at the same time. It's a good temporary move....if you need the advanced commercial experience and/or want to reset your pay...stay for 1-2 yrs then, go somewhere else with work from home and a little more professional autonomy.

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