New CEO Bad for Business - Anonymous employee Black & Veatch Employee Review

2.0
Dec 5, 2022
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The individual team members/professionals are great to work with and really want to Build a World of Difference.

Cons

The new CEO is negatively impacting the culture. After three successful years working remotely (the most profitable years in company history), and promises made by him in his first Town Hall to support the “Working in New Ways” initiative that was launched during Covid, he is now forcing people back to the office three days a week. This was a policy he rolled out on his own, without any input from employee owners or even the Presidents of our Divisions. He took away our voice and created a toxic work environment.

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Black & Veatch Response
3y
Thank you for sharing your feedback. We recognize our new hybrid policy is a change for our employees and we are continuing to listen and take their feedback into consideration.

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Cons

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1.0
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Pros

Fair starting compensation, the team I lead is very dedicated, the onboarding process is very smooth, there are opportunities to mentor and be mentored.

Cons

The current performance management process is deeply flawed. Leaders collect ratings from managers and supervisors, then gather in a room with peers to “calibrate.” During this meeting, a predetermined percentage of employees must receive low ratings. At one point, someone referred to this as “forced ratings,” and the IT leader became visibly upset, insisting that it was not. However, I was present for the discussion: we lowered ratings, checked the spreadsheet, lowered more ratings, checked the spreadsheet again, and repeated this cycle until we hit the percentage the IT leader said had to be met. From conversations with peers outside of IT, this appears to be a common practice across the organization. Unfortunately, the approach often results in employees receiving ratings that do not accurately reflect their actual performance. These artificially lowered ratings directly affect merit increases and bonuses—even if the bonuses are relatively small—creating consequences that feel at best unfair. Regardless of what label is used, the experience felt undeniably forced.

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