FDM Group reviews

3.1

54% would recommend to a friend

(3,948 total reviews)
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Rod Flavell

56% approve of CEO

35% positive business outlook

FDM Group has an employee rating of 3.1 out of 5 stars, based on 3,948 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The FDM Group employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Tecnologías de la información industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

4K reviews
1.0
Mar 25, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- I am a IT consultant placed in APAC, specifically in Hong Kong. Transferring from the London office meant that this was a great opportunity for me to explore a new job in a new country and they sponsor your visa too! - Potentially get the opportunity to work for a financial institution - Pay is above average in the local HK market - I have referred more than 4 friends to the company, saying the company gives you a great opportunity to work for a potentially great institution while they provide you with basic IT skills that we never had the chance to learn at uni - Regardless of your academic background (non technical), you have a chance to progress into the ever growing IT field.

Cons

- Training is unpaid in UK, I went about 5/6 months of unemployment due to a lack of job opportunities in APAC. APAC office take priority of their consultant first as they are paid during training which left me waiting to take jobs that no one wanted. -Training on a specific stream does not guarantee that you will be placed in that area of work. Account managers only care about placing you in a role. I have seen developers get placed in manual testing roles, where they are unhappy but have no say in the decision. - Once you are placed in a "role" you have to keep quiet and cant express any opinion or your well-being to FDM. When you do, HR just ignores you and informs you to carry on -Very unprofessional. There are cases where HR works with internal staff against your own personal interest. -The training fee is absurdly high at £20K in london and £25K for Hong Kong consultants. It is understandable that you pay for this fee if you leave voluntarily. However, if FDM ultimately decides to sack you, you also have to pay the fee. This process of decision is completely based on non-factual value. If they do not like you because you spoke up about not being happy in the placement, they can sack you and unload the fee onto you. - Felt extremely discriminated against by FDM Staff, knowing other consultants have gone through the exactly same placement and scenario as me as they were my colleagues. But they did not receive the treatment.

2.0
Mar 24, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

For those without experience, who are willing and able to commit over 2 years to FDM, you will be exposed to good technical training in a variety of programming languages and practical training. IF you are lucky, you may even get a good placement in a role you desire at a great firm which could be a great start to your career. Trainers are genuine and very nice. Trainees are like yourselves and you can make many friends like I did. If you feel like you absolutely cannot find work elsewhere and can gamble just over 2 years of the start of your career, FDM could be a great potential start for you.

Cons

Let's establish something that FDM very hesitantly talks about... this is a gamble. You have ZERO guarantee over a few major issues during your employment with FDM. 1- You may not get placed 2- You can get placed with any firm (good or bad) and you have ZERO say in the matter 3- You may not get a role you want and again have ZERO say in the matter 4- You can be placed anywhere in the UK and have ZERO say in the matter They are under ZERO obligation to place you anywhere you desire but they will however tell you that they will "try". Paraphrasing from an FDM employee, "Consultants cannot pick and choose where they want to go, our business model is demand and supply and thus you are obligated by contract, to go forward for ANY and ALL roles you are put forward for". To summarise, it is a complete gamble where you will be placed, (both firm AND location). Many friends of mine have been placed far from their homes forcing them to move to do roles they hate for up to 2 years. Essentially obliterating the career path they had in mind. IF you decline, you WILL be charged £20,000 training fees (or potentially more if you had additional training, some consultants have been and are liable for £35k+ training fees due to the courses they took, these costs incurred over only 2 months). One of the biggest faults of FDM, is that Account Managers (the people who place you), have no incentive to care about where you are placed. They don't need to worry about FDM consultants leaving, or being unhappy as if they leave, they are charged with an extortionate amount of money, £20,000 which for recent graduates like ourselves, is near impossible to pay off. Many consultants like myself, have seen this first hand. The account managers are nice up to the point you have been placed, then they act like they don't even know you, and if you question the role or try to get out of the role, you are sent to HR or management to have a "chat" about how you are obligated to go for the role. The majority of account managers care about one thing only, their commission for getting you placed. The entire business model in my opinion is completely unethical. Why care about the trainee when you can put a £20k+ leash on them instead? Training is 2+ months long and UNPAID... if you are paying rent, especially in London, I hope you have deep pockets... Conclusion: FDM is a gamble, you could be placed somewhere great, or you could be placed somewhere terrible, or you might not be placed at all wasting a huge amount of time. Account managers don't care about you and as a result, I would argue that from my experience, 50-60% of consultants end up in a desired placement. Too many of my friends have been threatened by management with the £20k+ fee, this is completely unethical and unwarranted and is not done so by other professional companies who train employees and do not charge them with anything should they choose to leave.

1.0
Mar 28, 2021

Terrible company

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Get to work at top companies that you won't be able to get in but only as a external contractor which means....

Cons

It technically doesn't matter as you will not get any of the pros of working at a big blue chip company at all. Only join this company if: 1) You have zero career expectations. 2) You do not have any opinion on what you want to do and achieve in life. 3) You are okay with just a flat pay for the duration of your two years (24 months) with no annual bonus, no wage/ salary review for 2 years which also means there is zero incentive for anyone to be working hard. No reason to perform well at your placements. Good luck talking to you other friends and feeling good about yourself when you hear your friend getting annual wage increases and annual bonus or promotions. You get nothing. 4) All the above points are actually justifiable and clearly stated in your contract so it would actually be fine but they also do not care about what you want to do. (which in my opinion What training course you sign up for (Software Development, DevOps, Business Analyst) have absolutely zero bearing on what kind of work you will be doing at your placements. You can do the software development training course and get offered a cybersecurity role or a technical support role. That is where you learn about the FDM business structure. The account managers only care about placing you in any random role that they can find because it is a sales job after all for them. The more they place, the more money they get. When you get a role you do not want, you cannot say no to the interview so your only way out is to purposely screw the interview up and hope you do not get chosen. Just remember, what training you signed up for have no impact on the kind of work you will be doing. So just remember you need to be okay with doing anything if you want join this company (hence point 1 and 2). 5) The training which they say is world class is actually complete trash. Just to let you know, you are paying between 15k to 20k (which is almost like a Bachelors degree cost) plus for the training which later becomes your bond penalty if you decide to leave within the two years bond. Every single module is taught within ONE WEEK so a very dense conceptual framework is taught just in one week. Imagine learning a programming language framework in one week time which is a complete joke. So basically you will have to learn many many things yourself which then begs the question of why the training is so expensive in the first place and why you even need the training. Then you realise, without the training fee being somewhat expensive (which is your bond penalty), everyone who is dissatisfied by their low pay or bad placement opportunities would leave the company without thinking twice. The bond penalty fee is literally build into their business model so that they get to make the most from you when you decide to break the bond. With a training fee of 20k plus, you literally learn way more and in way deeper depth if you were to go take a graduate certificates from university or from better coding bootcamps. Hell, use the 20k to learn UDEMY courses and you literally will learn more. It's literally only expensive to deter you from breaking the bond which should tell you about the amount of effort that they will put in to make your experience good in the company. They don't have to care cause they hire many many people on the regular basis. Trust me, if you have a STEM degree or show you have any quantitative potential, you will get in easy as they are also incentivised to just hire without reallly being selective (unless you are really extremely terrible) as it benefits their business model. The more they hire, the more they can place, the more money they will make. It literally that simple. 6) I left the company and literally got a 40% pay raise which makes paying the bond penalty much easier. Seriously, don't let this company ruin the first two year of your career (which in my opinion is the most important) by forcing you to do unfulfilling work that you do not want to do. Cause after the two years, you will have major trouble finding your next opportunity as you have basically done random jobs in the two years bond which you do not have a say over. 7) Just a word on the good testimonials you see from FDM, it is true that there will be roles having good career development from FDM but those should be seen as a dime in a dozen. More likely, if you join FDM, you will have an average to terrible experience. The number of roles that have good career development that the account managers can place you is rare and just to note, the bond period does not start until you get placed at your first placement. It also does not include the training period which means that if you are very selective about your placement (which you can be by purposely performing terribly at interviews for roles you do not want) you are really just screwing yourself up in the long term as this might cause you to stay at FDM for even up to their 3 years (training + period after training where you are trying to get placed + actual 2 year placement once you get placed) So it is very exploitative and you will definitely feel the pressure of just accepting any placement that the account managers can give you. Just keep that in mind, it is not just TWO years at a crappy pay package (flat pay at 24 months with no bonus, no wage supplement, no annual review), it is actually going to be way longer than two years. Especially if you are not lucky enough to get placed at a role that YOU WANT DURING training which minimises the lull after training when you are just trying to get placed. The stars basically have to align for you to have a good experience at FDM if not you are just going to have resentment for the company. The worst thing is you do not exactly have any control over the placement process. Your fate is basically in the account managers' hands. Someone I know only got placed 6 months after his 4 month training so which means his 2 years bond only started counting down after 10 months at FDM. Which means crappy pay package for 2 years 10 months. 8) If anything, FDM have only taught me to be patient about my employment choices. Don't be too quick to join a company that advertises an illustrious career to work at the top tech firms and have a very enriching career that you won't need top tier grades to get into. If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is. Also companies don't usually hire contractors to do meaningful and important tasks. It typically is only going to be grunt work and routine task that nobody wants to do so it is just much cheaper to hire external contractors to do the work.

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