Slalom reviews

3.5

53% would recommend to a friend

(3,512 total reviews)
avatar

Brad Jackson

47% approve of CEO

37% positive business outlook

Slalom has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 3,512 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
3.0
Jan 29, 2018

Proceed with caution

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Amazing company culture. Senior level leadership is very present and involved but they do seem to turn a blind eye to tough issues. Great perks. Super fun events. If you are considering a job here I would encourage you to read a cross section of these reviews and figure out what questions need to be asked based on what you're reading and what is important to you.

Cons

Some teams have poor leadership that appears to go unchecked. Pay is not great. HR policies are ambiguous and ways to provide feedback in a safe environment in which retaliation is not feared do not exist.

avatar
Slalom Response
8y
This is John Tobin. You should reach out to me to do that exit interview. Simply send me an email at johnt@slalom.com, so I can find out more about your specific experiences. Alternatively, if you want to provide more feedback anonymously, please consider doing so via this survey: http://slalom.ws/anonsurvey.
3.0
Oct 1, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Lots of very energetic and smart folks Potential to pitch your ideas and drive your own path High end clients, so big budgets to work with Events and after work activities

Cons

As an hourly consultant, insane pressure to hit 40+ billable weeks WLB is not real for the lower level folks, or people staffed out to clients Benefits lower then other firms of this type Growth stagnant do to internal culture Being a 40+ white male used against you by your bosses More technical folks commonly under promoted, kept in worker bee roles to be more billable so you leadership is not as knowledgeable as your teams. This leads to issues and tension between your technical staff and others. Was told remote working was a future, was a total lie...have to be either close to the office, or willing to fly and live on site at a client....not real remote opportunities.

avatar
Slalom Response
8y
This is John Tobin. I would love to talk to you to understand what you experienced - please email me at johnt@slalom.com to set up a time to talk. I'm guessing you were part of one of our specialized capabilities and we continue to evolve how we can support clients in certain areas - would be good to talk through that. Alternatively, if you want to provide more feedback anonymously, please consider doing so via this survey: http://slalom.ws/anonsurvey.
2.0
Sep 29, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

These reviews are based on Slalom Boston only and I believe each office operates little bit differently. Majority of the people are hired from Big4 consulting firms - therefore there is a pretty good talent and pedigree of people. People are friendly, nice and good camaraderie among people. Pretty good work/life balance. Annual summer and winter events are pretty solid. With all the "Cons" you might see below, still lot of good talent. May not be a bad company if you are < 3 or 4 years of experience and/or you plan to stay only for 1 - 2 years.

Cons

These reviews are for Slalom Boston and I believe each office operates little bit differently. Pretty much 70% of the consulting engagements are staff augment / temp staffing type assignments. You are by yourself at the client with little to no support except when role is being extended or opportunity for potential up-sell. The client engagement staffing is poor and is based on available roles (demand) and available people (supply) rather than skills and experience match for the role. If you were an experienced PM before you may end up staffed as junior BA in a long term client project or if you are not an IT person and you might end up in an IT project. And you are stuck there for a long time doing things you do not like. Most of us end up as perpetual Consultant (job title) - no meaningful upward career trajectory. There are many many "consultants" who have been around for a 3+ years without any potential for upward movement and many people who joined 3 years ago or before have left the company. Internal leadership roles are filled by hiring from outside rather than grooming and promoting the experience staff. When you joining Slalom, they may match / even pay little bit more than your current salary, but once you are in your annual increase and bonus are are very very small (3 - 4% a year at the most). And you are expected to do lot more than your client work to crack the 5% mark (with at least 10+ hours a week). Not a great option for experienced consultants - for instance if you are a Sr. Consultant, Manager and above in any of the major consulting firm, then you will feel very much stuck in Slalom. The job titles are not very industry standard and comparable to others. The job titles in client services are: Consultant, Principal Consultant, Consulting Manager, Solution Architect, Solution Principal, Practice Area Lead and Client Services Lead. You are told that this is not linear and you can go from any title to any title. There are couple of people who used to be "Directors" in other firms joined Slalom as consultants and they have been "consultants" ever since. They are at the bottom of the pile with everyone else. If you were to compare to Accenture, Deloitte or PwC consulting titles: Principal Consultant and Consulting Manager is equivalent to "Manager" in Accenture; Solution Principal and Solution Architect is equivalent to "Senior Consultant" or Manager in Accenture and the only difference is you are specialized in certain area (example Project Management). Poor leadership - During the hiring process you are told Slalom is entrepreneurial and you can make your own career, flat organization, etc., but in reality there is a ceiling you'll be stuck under and if you stay here many years you career will stall and you will not be marketable. There is lot of dissatisfaction among staff and resulting in quite a bit of attrition. There is a general consensus that people have been treated poorly when they gave notice to leave the company. Most everyone I know are looking for opportunities to jump. Poor benefits.

avatar
Slalom Response
8y
This is John Tobin. If you want to share more about your experience in Slalom Boston, please send me an email at johnt@slalom.com to discuss. I see there is an opportunity for us to shape our Career Framework and Paths more at Slalom and there is an initiative underway that is considering options around this. That said, I still believe in having more of a flat-like feel than a hierarchical organization. I know we are not perfect here, and we are taking action on this currently as part of our 2020 strategy. If you want to provide more feedback anonymously, please consider doing so via this survey: http://slalom.ws/anonsurvey
Viewing 184 - 186 of 3,512 Reviews

Glassdoor has 3,674 Slalom reviews submitted anonymously by Slalom employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Slalom is right for you.