Don't believe the hype - Anonymous employee Slalom Employee Review

3.0
Apr 4, 2018
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Colleagues are amazing -- hardworking, smart, friendly, with really interesting backgrounds. Unlike my experience with previous consulting firms, people are more than willing to share knowledge and information; the environment isn't super competitive and there's no drive to steamroll over others to get to a coveted promotion or leadership position. The organization is fairly flat. Lots of great perks to help you feel like you are truly part of the larger Slalom community.

Cons

For all of Slalom's magic, there are several drawbacks: Little work/life balance/flexibility - Slalom will claim that their focus on work/life balance differentiates them from other consulting firms (w/ their focus on the local market = no travel for the consultant), but they make up for it by holding multiple company events EVERY WEEK. Supposedly most of it is "optional", but you quickly learn that this is simply untrue. People notice when you're missing from an event. There is absolutely no respect for your time. Unfulfilling client work - This is another one of those exaggerated claims that Slalom likes to make. Consultants absolutely perform staff augmentation work! And like every consulting firm on the planet, as long it's making money for the firm, it doesn't really matter what you're doing. To be fair, not sure if this is a pervasive issue across all markets, or just the one I'm in. Lack of diversity -- This is an interesting one. I don't mean lack of diverse racial backgrounds, ethnicities, etc. Almost every consultant is former Accenture, Deloitte, PwC, Booz, etc. who attended a big name school and completed study abroad somewhere exotic. If you're not of a certain pedigree, be prepared to stick out like a sore thumb. Questionable "leadership" - some of the more senior-level consultants responsible for overseeing multiple projects clearly don't know what they are doing. Despite a seemingly fair and objective promotion process, I've wondered many times how some of these folks got to where they are. Bottom line: don't be wooed by all the promises made during the interview process. Understand what you're getting into before you accept the offer. If you don't care much for a life outside of work, and enjoy the cache of being a "consultant"and everything that entails while losing your identify in the process, then this is the place for you. If you value true diversity, work/life balance, working relationships built on mutual trust and respect (not the facade of it), keep looking!

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Slalom Response
8y
Thank you for the candid feedback around what you are experiencing at Slalom DC. Because you are a current employee, I can assure you Slalom wants you on our team. Please seek me out so that we can talk about this and fix this together. We are a growing office and my most important priority is building and protecting our culture. If you are not comfortable reaching to me directly, I encourage you to share more thoughts via this anonymous survey: http://slalom.ws/anonsurvey. Kristine Rohls

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Pros

•There is an impressive budget, especially for high-level events, ancillary experiences, client giveaways, and premium swag. Management does not hesitate to fund top-notch brand experiences when needed. •The company offers a highly competitive benefits and perks package that remains a strong selling point.

Cons

•The "fiercely human" core value does not match daily operations. Collaboration is routinely replaced by a self-service model of training videos and help articles. •These recurring shifts are designed to manufacture the appearance of fiscal stability for the benefit of external stakeholders and clients, while leaving core operational deficits unaddressed. •Organizational maturity is low. Teams operate in deep silos, the internal tech stack is outdated, and there is a distinct lack of adequate project and event management software.

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