Guidehouse reviews

3.1

41% would recommend to a friend

(2,786 total reviews)
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Scott McIntyre

39% approve of CEO

33% positive business outlook

Guidehouse has an employee rating of 3.1 out of 5 stars, based on 2,786 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Guidehouse employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Management & Consulting industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

3K reviews
2.0
Jan 3, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Leadership at the Director and Partner level is generally legacy PwC and consists of high quality, competent professionals - Good place for less accomplished or credentialed professionals to get a huge pay raise and title increase by coming to Guidehouse

Cons

Leadership - Scott McIntyre and the C suite seems completely out of touch with the company. Occasionally, Scott will hold all hands but the meetings seem like nothing more than Scott listening to himself speak in non-tangible terms and says nothing of substance in an hour. The IT infrastructure has long been an issue long before Guidehouse but has been exponentially worse under Chas' leadership. Ownership - The ownership of Veritas Capital has been increasingly visible with slashes to the retirement match (removal of wealth builder), moving to unlimited PTO for Managers and above, lower pay raises and bonuses, and further reductions in benefits. This will likely continue in perpetuity. Career Advancement - In stark contrast to PwC, Guidehouse is run like a staff augmentation company. Generally speaking, if you are staffed to an engagement, that is where you will stay as long as the contract is active. If you have other career ambition, moving to a different project may be possible but will come with resentment from the Director whose project you are leaving. As of 1/1/2020, there is an additional career level which has been input making advancement from Manager (now Managing Consultant) to Director more difficult as you need to be promoted to "Associate Director" first. Back Office Investment - Since the carve out of PwC's public sector there has been little investment in back office operations such as recruiting, finance, etc. which has made simple tasks like invoicing or filling open positions difficult. Many of the legacy start performers were burned out and departed the company, leaving a smaller less experienced staff to complete these functions.

2.0
Jul 20, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There’s room to learn, especially if you're early in your career and eager to gain hands-on experience. Remote work flexibility is a plus, particularly in roles that are fully remote. You’ll be exposed to real-world challenges that can help build resilience and sharpen your skills. If you're proactive, there are chances to grow—just be aware that job security may depend more on internal politics than performance.

Cons

Lack of effective leadership: Management often seems disconnected from day-to-day realities. Strategic direction and accountability are unclear, and individual contributors are frequently left to resolve issues without proper support. Culture of blame: When challenges arise, responsibility is often shifted downwards rather than addressed at the leadership level. Ongoing layoffs: The company has experienced frequent restructuring, creating a sense of instability across teams. Utilization pressures: Utilization expectations are not clearly defined, yet heavily emphasized. The pressure to meet targets can feel arbitrary and misaligned with project realities. Time-off discouragement: While the company offers DTO (Discretionary Time Off), most employees feel pressured to take no more than 2–3 weeks per year. Sick leave, even if legitimate, can negatively affect perceived utilization.

5.0
Mar 15, 2021

Good Pay vs WLB

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Pay is really good considering WLB (for the most part, varies proj to proj). New company so it's up to you to make the culture what it is. Growing fast A growing amount of work is very interesting, whether in tech, life sciences, energy, or healthcare. Ability to move around practices, so long as you put in the work to network. Driven employees Merger with Navigant means there is commercial work too, not just gov. International company with offices overseas. Guidehouse seemed to have taken the BLM movement seriously + employees during the Texas snow storm

Cons

New company so it's up to you to make the culture what it is. Some people just want things to be great from day one, which is understandable. Growing fast - but not as fast as staffing. This can mean a lot of work depending on the project Benefits have been getting cut. Management says it's because they were never being used, which may be true, but having them is also a morale thing. Majority of work seems to be finance / accounting related. Makes sense given that Guidehouse was part of PWC, but also not interesting IMO. When it comes to tech, they are pursuing very cool things (AI/ML, blockchain, distributed computing), but don't have a lot of work in it. People can get staffed on boring projects that they are overqualified for. I'm fortunate to get to do lots of R&D which I enjoy.

Viewing 43 - 45 of 2,786 Reviews

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