Slalom reviews

3.5

53% would recommend to a friend

(3,505 total reviews)
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Brad Jackson

47% approve of CEO

37% positive business outlook

Slalom has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 3,505 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Slalom 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

4K reviews
2.0
Nov 6, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Constantly evolving, I think they do care even if it doesn't immediately/consistently come across, and I give them credit for trying. I have great colleagues that I am happy to count as friends and hang out with outside of work. Healthcare premiums did not increase this year.

Cons

When you read a lot of these "this place is great" reviews, you'll notice that many of them are written by former big-four consultants who are new to the firm. I think their perspective is correct, it IS a better place than big-four. However, this firm is hiring so many big-four folks that we are beginning to look and sound like a big-four firm. This isn't necessarily a welcome change for those of us with tenure. Long-term employees who are looking to expand and grow into new roles, or resurrect roles we once played before we got typecast into a particular role, are often overlooked for the "fancier, shinier" new hire. People managers are inconsistently successful in advocating for their people; if you have one who is politically connected and cares enough to invest their political capital in you, then you're in good shape; if not, well, good luck. This office also is struggling with retaining female leaders. The most senior female leader just announced her resignation. Who knows what will happen. Given how things have operated lately, we can only assume that this means that "new, extremely talented" women will be hired from outside (probably big 4) before any current consultants are given the chance to step up and be developed into these roles.

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Slalom Response
9y
This is John Tobin. I can tell you, if you have been here for as long as you have, you ARE valued. I hope you have an honest and open conversation with your Atlanta leaders and I would certainly welcome a conversation - simply email me at johnt@slalom.com. If there's anything else that that you'd like to share anonymously, please do so via this survey: http://slalom.ws/anonsurvey. Thanks.
2.0
Dec 10, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great culture to promote junior talent (less than 5 years of industry experience), and gets quick promotions and keep morale high for these employees. Leaders 13+ years of industry experience joining at Director or above level will have lot of fun as they get to fool around with junior and mid senior folks.

Cons

Anyone who joins at Consultant level for mid-senior (7 to 13 years of experience) the opportunities and work will suck unless you join director or above positions. Compensation is peanuts and no travel is a gimmick, when you end up travelling tri state (NJ, NY , LI and CT), real long commutes with no night stay option. I would rather travel couple of days long distance every week like Deloitte and big 4 are offering than local long commute. Company spies on you to understand if you are job hunting specially when you are in middle of your projects, these are market research companies or unknown recruiters /agencies and even some big 4 recruiters. so be careful if you get contacted by recruiters , this could very well be orchestrated interview by slalom itself!

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Slalom Response
10y
This is John Tobin. I'm sorry your experience was not that great for you at Slalom. As to the orchestrated recruiting calls, I have never heard anything like that before and I intend to investigate that with the NY and recruiting teams in general. We are generally lauded for our recruiting team and capability, so I will look to resolve this if this did occur. Of course Slalom is not for everyone and we need to keep people here on the merit of the great things we do with our clients and for our people. If you have more specifics you want to share, simply email me at johnt@slalom.com
2.0
Sep 7, 2015

Culture fit...or else

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Nice perks offered. Lax dress code. The promise of a "flat" organizational structure. Good benefits package. A good social environment with generally nice people.

Cons

Extremely open floor plan with no privacy. They have en entire department devoted to routing inquiries of consultants to the proper departments, because they don't really expect consultants to do anything for themselves nor offer them the proper tools to get that information appropriately. Frequent changes in new procedures are distributed via email announcements without being documented elsewhere. In fact, they insist on not having a written record of some procedures/discussions to avoid liability. The workplace culture consists of a veneer of friendliness over ruthlessness. Once management targets someone who isn't a "culture fit", they use all manner of tactics to push them out to avoid paying unemployment. One week you're doing great and at the top of the rankings, the next week you're under strict review and receiving harsh feedback for minor issues from other managers (at the instruction of your direct manager). All of this is meticulously documented, of course, in order to build a case for misconduct to deny unemployment. One example, in particular, was that despite feedback that I wasn't being "accurate" enough in my work (they declined to offer a measure of what that meant), in a span of two weeks, they increased my workload by 30%. Then they initiated a cascade of talks about my performance without allowing for more than a day or two in between to show improvement. This led to a PIP, wherein I was given several days to have 100% accuracy (without giving an objective measure of evaluation) shortly after being given 30% more work with a new client and during the most hectic time of the fiscal cycle. In regards to their training methods, it is very piecemeal with no documentation other than incidental emails and trial and error. Most training is done in sessions where one is given the same, repetitive scenarios and examples with the same, exact wording. Management stresses that questions be asked in any scenario yet punishes targeted individuals for asking too many questions then reprimands the individual when questions aren't asked in a particular situation. It's crazy-making. Even the perks and benefits are mostly geared towards revenue-generating consultants. They "offer" the same perks to internal employees, but it's generally frowned upon if they are actually used as freely as consultants use them. There was some controversy over the use of the kegerator in the Accounting department (which has since been removed) while consultants can be seen pulling from other kegerators during lunch. Don't even get me started on "mandatory fun".

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Slalom Response
10y
This is John Tobin. I will share with our Corporate group and more specifically the Accounting & Finance team as based on your comments, that is probably the department you worked in. It's helpful to get this type of feedback and I can tell you as a company we strive to truly be an Inclusive work environment. This does mean that although we are proud of our culture and that we have a lot of events to foster togetherness, we need to stop short of it being mandatory. If you have more feedback you would like to provide anonymously I would encourage you to send to feedback@slalom.com. Thanks
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