TIAA reviews

3.7

65% would recommend to a friend

(4,015 total reviews)

Thasunda Brown Duckett

54% approve of CEO

53% positive business outlook

TIAA has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 4,015 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The TIAA 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

4K reviews
1.0
Oct 21, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good base pay. The clients you work with are incredible people. If you make it long enough, it provides a good variable compensation, but most advisors last less than 3 years.

Cons

Variable comp is only paid ANNUALLY. Don't be fooled. They say "we're only focused on doing what's best for our clients" according to TIAA, What's best for EVERY client is managed money. Meanwhile they are hitting advisors with unrealistic sales goals, and forcing our tenured advisors for not hitting their goals. I have personally seen 70% increase followed by a 20% increase in two years. Most managers have not done the job they are managing. Complete ineptitude. Don't plan on getting any valuable support from your manager.

2.0
Jul 12, 2015

Wma

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good people in my office. Interesting and informed clients. The company provides a client list but youre on your own to getthem to do business

Cons

Appallingly poor back office followup. The wma position is liking working in a boiler room. Client service? Developing relationships? Forget it. The sole focus is bringing in the assets. All else be damned.

1.0
Jan 15, 2025

The company is a woke mess

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The benefits, PTO, and pay are all competitive. This is what primarily keeps people working at the company.

Cons

TIAA obviously hires and promotes primarily on the basis of DEI. It's fairly common to see minorities with minimal education and work experience be promoted into manager and director roles that they are not prepared for. Over time this has created a company led by some of the most incompetent leaders I have ever encountered in the workplace. This company is not a meritocracy at all. There is almost nothing TIAA excels at anymore. As a result, the company has been struggling. Nuveen, an acquisition, with its hub in Chicago, seems to be propping TIAA up. The CEO of TIAA was a DEI hire, who has low approval ratings on Glassdoor (currently less than 60%), and there is internal division as to whether she is leading the company in the right direction. Being aware like everyone else that massive change is needed at the company, she has sold off business units, outsourced low performing processing units, and is now moving an entire hub from Colorado to Texas. It's too early to determine if these recent decisions are good ones, but it has clearly resulted in low popularity for the time being. Her recent marketing initiatives, however, were woke disasters for the company. In my personal experience, non-exempt roles usually have good work-life balance, while exempt roles often have absolutely crushing workloads. The company is building a massive hub in Texas, so it's clearly committed to the current hybrid model. Most employees want to be 100% remote, but the communication from leadership has been that they don't want to take the company in that direction. Overall, I wish I never came to work for this company.

Viewing 109 - 111 of 4,015 Reviews

Glassdoor has 4,411 TIAA reviews submitted anonymously by TIAA employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if TIAA is right for you.