EY reviews

3.7

70% would recommend to a friend

(83,993 total reviews)
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Janet Truncale

79% approve of CEO

60% positive business outlook

EY has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 83,993 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The EY employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Finanzas industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

84K reviews
3.0
Mar 26, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great exposure to industries, business and branding Career progressions and prospects to climb the ladder

Cons

Inconsistent way of work Poor Management especially at Managerial and Senior Management levels: To be fair EY is a mixed bag of excellent Senior Managers and very poor ones. They love referring to the bell curve for this. Good Senior Managers are overstretched and overworked, the poor ones wreak havoc on the teams they oversee and impacts employee retention. Everything you read about it is true: inconsistent way of work, bullying, expectations of working all hours into the night due to selfishness and poor management, unclear direction, petty behaviour, quiet firing, making work inhospitable for its employees. I have no advice to management for this since EY has already decided on its priorities - it is delivery first, everything else second, Despite what HR efforts espouses on Mental Health and Work Life Balance, unless there is a concerted effort from the top to align what is preached to day-to-day work life we can expect no changes. This is why EY continues to be a corporation - a revolving door of employees driven by the brand name and opportunities it brings, but exit-ers sick of the way of work. You may measure your life on these terms, if you are okay with the trade offs, join. If you are not, best to give it a miss.

1.0
Dec 26, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

This review is for people who are being interviewed or thinking of applying to EY Consulting. They can decide themselves if there is any pro associated to it.

Cons

Let us start with the interviews and job openings. I conducted too many interviews for EY but never understood the hiring logic or the planning behind them. And I never met anyone in the firm who understands it. The most important thing that you need to know about EY Ireland is after they hire you, the interview process is actually just starting. I am pretty sure it is different in other countries but EY Ireland basically operates like a recruitment company such as Hays. I haven't seen them actually being consulted on anything or delivering anything themselves (which was an absolute disappointment for me after I joined), but they simply place resources in their clients' projects. So when you are interviewed or even offered a job, there isn't actually a project or client in their mind for you. They are simply extending their resource pool. What that means is that you will have to continue to apply for openings and projects in EY after you join, because EY has no control over their own resources in their own engagements and they just present your CVs to the clients. Like they cannot even vouch for a resource to be accepted. All CVs go to the client and it's the same interview process. I myself had two interviews with the client after I joined. That alone is a solid proof to me that they are in the recruitment business, not consulting. Like if EY actually sold their services to the client (if such services exist), and they committed to deliver something in the end (if there is such delivery), why would the client pick every single resource? I was directly sent to a client as soon as I joined (no onboarding), I worked like their employee, using their systems, their processes, their rules. I had no connection with EY at all. I mean literally nothing, and I cannot stress this enough. For about 9 months I did not even use my EY laptop, because I did not have to. I did not know these things before I joined and that deeply disturbed me. Because I have seen too many people, especially new joiners being blamed, stressed and their probation extended or canceled just because EY could not find a suitable position for them. And these people were questioned in a quite demotivating manner why they weren't able to find a project yet (as if resource planning is their responsibility). Also even if you start working for a client, they can always ask EY to replace you asap just because they didn't like something about you. As I mentioned, EY has no control over its own resources. The level of mobbing on the other hand is exactly what you expect. You may be forced to work with an engagement manager who provides no handover, no initiation, no orientation, your so-called career counsellor may not even bother to meet you when you join (happened to me), and if you join one their biggest clients you will probably have to wait for a month to get access to their systems. Without access you cannot do anything. But none of these will be accepted as an excuse and you will be expected to perform 100% or you will be given a PIP immediately. Your experience may differ but a highly likely scenario is: you will be asked to do perform tasks which are not explained to you at all, or you will be judged by some completely undisclosed expectations and prejudiced opinions. The onboarding and initiation process is almost nonexistent. If you somehow manage to survive like I did, you will probably be given an incompetent person whom you will not be allowed to correct or complain about, and then you will end up doing their work also. In a nutshell; incompetent engagement manager = your fault, incompetent subordinate = also your fault. (HR is also invisible and technically pointless but it's the same in every company) Again as you would expect, there is no work-life balance. You are expected to give 110% to the client at all times, but there are also lots of EY training to complete, and you must be very active to participate in so-called 'voluntary' but in reality half-mandatory exercises. Not to mention, you will always be put in competition with your peers regardless of your intentions. I knew that before I joined, so I did not complain about it. But after seeing that hostile welcoming, I intentionally (and proudly) did not do anything extra for EY. How I survived all this unprecedented and unjustified hostility despite doing nothing for other than client work and completely ignoring voluntary stuff is that 1-) I am good at what I do, so I completely ignored EY feedback and focused on my work, 2-) my contribution was visible to the client and that actually shielded me (which is what I recommend to everyone in this organization). Finally, a couple of more lifesavers for you which will not be explained to you in the interviews: Senior Managers are more like Senior Project Managers, Managers are definitely not managers but could be more like Project Coordinators in PM jargon. And the rest sends meeting invites, takes minutes, corrects typos in presentations, copies Excel data from one tab to another, does the paperwork etc... This is also useful information because I have seen people who accepted the offer as 'Manager' and got quite disappointed when they found out sending meeting invites and distributing minutes took 70% of their time. It's a shame that I joined them hoping to learn something from EY, I was quite ecstatic when I accepted the offer. But all I got from EY is hardened endurance against mobbing. EY unintentionally gave me the strength of not to complain any more, because whenever I compare anything present against what I experienced in EY, I automatically feel content.

1.0
Jan 23, 2021

Grass is greener elsewhere

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Not much, other than the fact that you train up on your technical skills and exposure to a variety of industries and companies. In addition, many MNCs do look for Big 4 candidates especially in the Finance role.

Cons

- low pay at associate to senior level - OT culture (very common in Big 4, I know even before I joined but you really see emails flying around at 2/3/4am) - to add on to OT culture, my first year I worked from 9am to 5am, grab home wash up, rest 2h and came back to work, REPEAT X5-6 TIMES A WEEK) - toxic culture (seniors and managers are not appreciative of your work, they take the extra effort and work you put in for granted) - adding on to toxic culture: personal experience with toxic seniors that sent you extremely long emails just to criticise you and put you down, the kind where you go into office in the morning with a happy mood and when you see the email from senior, your whole day is ruined - my own experience with line manager: my LM has never talked to me, even for feedback sessions, except for my last day in EY. To be very honest, a good manager is important in your first few years of career

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