GIC reviews

3.0

40% would recommend to a friend

(571 total reviews)
avatar

Lim Chow Kiat

60% approve of CEO

29% positive business outlook

GIC has an employee rating of 3.0 out of 5 stars, based on 571 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The GIC 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

571 reviews
2.0
Oct 7, 2018

Internal policies are contradictory

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

1. Good compensation package. 2. Good office location 3. Good benefits

Cons

1. Flight risks rewarded with promotions. 2. Open concept office adopted indiscriminately. Certain functions are not suited to work in such environments. 3. Departments made to charge each other and earn income from each other, but yet told to collaborate. 4. Innovation for the sake of innovation due to pressure to innovate.

2.0
May 10, 2014

Good for a government institution, but will never be a good investment company

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Zero stress environment Very good work life balance 'Nice' people Work is interesting most of the time Job security - very little chance of being fired

Cons

Bureaucracy - you cannot do anything outside the box ever (there is a committee for everything - literally) Pay is below market (but you also work less + job security) People posture and talk a lot (the firm wants to be 'The Best Investment Company in the world' - lots of ambitious talking but reality is completely opposite Not a place to learn to become a good investor (people are very well education - e.g. Harvard MBA etc, but zero talent in investing). Under perform the benchmark for the last 20 years Everyone avoid taking any risk (the most conservative and boring place you can work in)

1.0
Mar 12, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

• Decent compensation and benefits. • Talented engineers and colleagues at the working level.

Cons

The Technology Group (TG) suffers from deep structural and cultural issues that make it a very frustrating place to work. First, senior leadership lacks clear direction. The organization goes through frequent and extreme reorganizations that create instability across teams. Entire groups are reshuffled regularly, and waves of new SVPs and MDs are hired who come in with unrealistic targets and workloads to prove themselves quickly. Engineers often end up executing initiatives that exist mainly to satisfy leadership optics rather than meaningful technical or business outcomes, and many people get pushed into roles that do not align with their career ambitions. Second, office politics play an outsized role in hiring and promotions. Advancement often appears tied more to relationships and perception than merit. It is not uncommon to see new senior leaders bring in people they previously worked with, even when their ability to lead in the new environment is questionable. This creates a perception that loyalty networks matter more than performance. Third, there is very little psychological safety. The culture leans heavily toward blame when things go wrong. Teams and vendors may make mistakes as happens in any complex engineering environment but the accountability often flows downward in a way that discourages transparency and experimentation. This results in risk-averse behavior and defensive management. Fourth, processes especially around cybersecurity and architecture are extremely inefficient. The architecture review and IT risk assessment processes feel designed to block progress rather than enable it. The default stance is that everything is disallowed unless proven otherwise, which leads to excessive friction, long approval cycles, and frustration for engineers trying to deliver solutions. At the same time, managers often push unrealistic timelines and projects that appear more focused on internal visibility than real business value. Finally, the organization talks constantly about prioritization, yet little actually changes. Many initiatives continue to compete for attention simultaneously without clear trade-offs. Fundamentally, these issues stem from misaligned incentives. Performance is evaluated on short-term annual outcomes even though the organization positions itself as a long-term investor. This encourages short-term signaling, constant reorganizations, and leadership initiatives that optimize for yearly reviews rather than sustainable engineering and business impact.

Viewing 109 - 111 of 571 Reviews

Glassdoor has 843 GIC reviews submitted anonymously by GIC employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if GIC is right for you.