Great place to work - Senior Consultant - Cybersecurity EY Employee Review

5.0
Jan 29, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

EY will challenge you and client engagements will force you to perform and get you out of your comfort zone for sure. But it teaches you to be the best. EY helps (more like forces) you to be confident and develop your executive presence. The benefits are amazing, pay is above market. EY takes great care of its people. The well-being fund gives employees $1000 for wellness and fitness per year (e.g., gym equipment, memberships, meal delivery services, home office ergonomics, personal fitness trainings, etc.). Work from home when not traveling (since Covid, no travel so full time work from home) Managers and leaders in certain practice (e.g. cybersecurity) are extremely nice and accommodating. Teams work together and sharing work templates to help each other out. Access to all relevant training - they'll pay for you to attend boot camps/trainings relevant to your position. If it's a certification relevant to your position, they give merit bonuses if you complete certifications.

Cons

Pre Covid, travel was weekly, Mondays to Thursdays for most clients. Extensive travel for client facing engagements. No clear KPI for promotion - even if you do meet or exceed their made up metrics, you can still get skipped over for promotion. It's a people industry so if you're not an outgoing, networking and highly likeable or close to a type A, don't count on being promoted quickly. If you're the hands-on-keyboard, engineer, quiet type, this position may not be for you. Some teams are clique-ish. If you're not part of the cool kids crew, you won't get staffed in good decent engagements. It's really up to you to be outgoing and make connections, be visible, and market yourself, otherwise, you'll get left behind. Hours can be long depending on the client or engagement. Certain leaders/managers/senior managers will sell and SOW that half of them don't really know the work it takes to do them, then you'd have to fix it once work is sold. For example, they'd sell work that typically would last 10 weeks, sell it for 6 weeks just to make the sale, and whoever comes in to actually do work will have to make sure they meet what the timeline.

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Pros

Great projects, coworkers and teams with interesting work

Cons

Too many hours during the busy season

5.0
Feb 21, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
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Pros

1. You will have a very hard time not falling in love with every single person you meet there. 2. Seriously, you will meet your soul mate(s) there. 3. Prestigious and looks great on the resume. 4. Your brain will grow a thousand times more powerful. 5. Forces you to conquer your fear of public speaking. 6. Fun team bonding and lifelong friends. 7. Stepping stone to high paying jobs. 8. Helps you work on perfecting your charm. You will learn from the most charming people how to really get people to like you. 9. HR really cares. 10. Big support network (IT, creative services, etc.). 11. Teaches you to be calm and in control.

Cons

OK, I'm going to be discussing all the taboo things, and there are a lot of them. In spite of these cons, I still admit it's worth a five star rating. 1. High performers are "designated" (you have very little control over your rating) by the partner group (can be a pro if you get selected. Seriously, I have worked with some of the supposed "fives" and they are not any different than my threes and fours. 2. Quality is extremely low. Sometimes I felt like I was working at McDonalds and not a professional services firm. The emphasis is on getting through work as fast as possible and expectations for quality are not realistic. 3. EY has a very hard time firing bad employees. If you get stuck with one it can be a nightmare. 4. EY has a heavy emphasis on wasting time. For example, there are lots and lots of checklists which have no value that you have to fill out. Also, they wasted money and time on creating "Canvas" which is literally slower and more awkward than the previous workspace tool, GAMX. There is a heavy emphasis on "reinventing the wheel" and fixing problems that aren't broken with even worse solutions. Instead of wasting money on useless tools, that money could have been spent on your employees in the form of compensation. Like I said, EY is really focused on attempting to look as though value is being created when in fact it is not. 5. Lots of meetings. Appearances are very important. 6. Employees on global 360 accounts get better treatment. 7. Some employees (executives mostly) tend to overemphasize how important this work is. Let's face it, if it was really glorious work then we would have action figures. 8. Looks are very important. Seriously, if you are a girl, you will get promoted based on how hot you are (the quality of your work is largely unimportant). If you are a guy, you are treated a little better but there is still a sexist undercurrent in the environment. This is advice you won't get from HR obviously, but that doesn't mean it isn't true. 8. You will be forced to eat hours. 9. Your ethical compass will start to get weaker. 10. You will get a little cynical. 11. Lots of driving and travel. 12. "Family men" and married couples with children are more likely to be promoted. If you want to be a partner, you have to be married (few exceptions). 13. You will work on vacations. 14. Loss of relationships with family and friends. 15. Some backstabbing and credit-stealing (but not very common). 16. Comp is below market but that's to be expected. 17. Employee retention is not something management is interested in. This makes you replaceable and expendable (yes even as a manager, unless you have been "designated" as a high performer by the partner group).

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