EY reviews

3.7

70% would recommend to a friend

(83,690 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 83,690 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 Finanzen industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

84K reviews
2.0
Jul 28, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

1. Amazing Leave policy - You can take all the leaves you want and never apply, no one questions you 2. People friendly organization 3 Pool table, TT table and lot of other recreational activities 4 Exposure to EY's audit methodology - If not in-depth, at least a trailer 5 Compensation is slightly better than Indian practice (CA Firms) but still much lower than the competitors in the field i.e other outsourced audit call centers in hyderabad and bangalore 6 A nice little pub underneath the office (Indi Joes) 7 Top management is easily approachable (most of the time they don't really have much to do and wander around next to the pantry, waiting for someone to strike a conversation) 8 Nice chicks !!

Cons

1. Leftover audit : It's not really Audit, so stop calling it that .. it's audit support, which basically means that you do the worst section of the audit which the americans and europeans are too lazy to do. 2. Lack of Training : They claim to be auditing US clients but never bother training anyone in US GAAP or IFRS. 3. Inactive management : The management, and by management I mean audit managers to directors never get involved in the actual audit. All they do is monitor Budgeted hours v/s actual hours (the famous B2A) and ofcourse go on fancy trips abroad to get more hours ( Oh yes ! the almighty hours, thats all the senior management care about). Serious word of advice, GET TECHNICAL .. you don't have a right to call yourself a manager just as much as we don't have the right to call ourselves audit seniors. 4. The work is primarily get done through Staffs ... the work of an audit senior is just to review and send across to the US counterparts. Neither the staffs nor the senior is involved in audit planning or get any kind of client interaction. The only thing they get is a mail from the onshore saying this is what we want you to do and here's how you do (Instruction based work) 5. Very little exposure to any kind of GAAPs, including indian accounting standards. One year in this place and you will definitely forget your golden rules, let alone accounting standards. 6. The title of this section explains exactly what EY GSS actually does to an Indian Chartered accountant or a US CPA ... "CONS" .. This is not really audit, so stop giving that picture when you hire CAs .. be honest there are lot of desperate CAs out there who would do this kind of a job in exchange of good money (Luckily I wasn't one of them) 7. Horrible coffee !! 8. Somehow Accent precedes technical knowledge in this place (Go figure!) 9. A lot of unwanted politics between qualified & non-qualified Seniors ... Oh yes! they do have a concept of non-qualified seniors .. although some of them are quite strong technically, however most of them are guys who just got there by Li cking the right places of the right people. If you lick hard enough, you may even become an Assistant Manager someday and be there for the rest of your life !! 10. Poor rotation policy to both india and abroad .

2.0
Dec 4, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The biggest and the greatest thing about EY is the brand (Still surprised why this is so). Get it on your resume and see the magic! Access to a lot of expensive information (like Thomson research, D&B reports, Onesource etc.) is available free to all employees due to a firmwide access right. Working mothers, even those expecting have some very supportive policies to make it easy for them. Some offices even have a creche to leave their kids while they work in the same building.

Cons

1. If you got in for the brand and didnt care about the salary - be prepared to be unhappy for a long time. Promotions happen once a year and you cant really expect much out of it. Very poor pay masters - and sometime even tell you that the difference from you pay and the industry standard is compensated by the 'brand name'. 2. Promotions and progressions are still in the age of King Arthur - Literally!!! For example - for an individual to be promoted - his performance is discussed in something called a 'round table'. The round table consists of all managers and above in that business group - irrespective of whether they manage you or not. As much as this sounds like a fair idea - it ends up being a fight each time where your manager is aruguing your case - and everyone else is trying to pull you down (however unrelated to your work they may be) as they have their own staff to be pushed for. I just dont see why an unrelated person must have a say in your performance just because he is a 'manager'. As detailed as the annual goals and individual BSC documents get - it is only second priority in the round table. More attention is given to 'behaviour', 'respecting seniors', 'how rebellious one is'. Your promotion is completely subjective - and highly dependent on how many members of the 'round table' have you in their good books. 3. 'Policies' are something EY loves to have around every little thing - and one would think it would be all employee friendly given how much the propaganda the 'People First work culture' gets. It is anything but that. The policy document itself is written in a "you and we" format that is so childish. (E.g - If you do this - we will deduct x amount). I am still wondering who is "you" and "we". Also - every single "policy" is nothing but a brilliant CYA strategy. (For e.g - the separation policy will say - You cannot encash your remaining annual leaves but may adjust them against your notice period - with management discretion. And the management will conveniently say its business critical for you stay the whole 2 months! You end up loosing your leaves, and stay the whole two months - and may even end up loosing the new job as they might not want to wait 2 months!) 4. The salary is a far cry from the industry benchmark. During appraisal discussion, you will probably be told that they only pay a certain percentage of the benchmark as they "EY Brand' will compensate for the rest!! 5. There are way too many partners, leaders and managers around for a focused leadership to work. Imagine there is a whole bandwagon of CXO level people (CEO, COO, CFO, CTO etc.) for Global, then a set for each service line at Global level - and that replicates at Area, sub-area and country level. There is no culture of walking up to anyone above you and talking directly. You will be asked to speak with your immediate boss who will do the required message exchange with higher levels. The other complexity to this - the reporting lines get seriously hazy as you go up the chain - and no one wants to show who reports to whom. 6. If you are from a corporate environment and hoping it will be the same here - be prepared for a lot of surprises. Its very 'firm-like' and if you do not like hierarchy, bureaucracy etc - this aint the place. 7. Employees are pushed at 100% billable work throughout (Sometimes out of fear that the latter half of the year might not have enough work). And over and above this, you have learning targets, a huge deal of administrative chores, meetings and useless forums to attend. Work life balance is not quite what exists at EY. 8. EY is anything but Global. Each office has its own way of managing things with local policies and procedures - including technology and infrastructure! Local partners will make the rules and everything works locally. As much as the 'mobility' and 'exchange programs' are popularized - it is not easy at all for you to find another job within EY and simply move.

1.0
Oct 21, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There are no pros, this hurts your mental health

Cons

I worked at EY for 7 months, and it was an extremely toxic work environment. Being in marketing isolated our team from all others. They had a very fraternity like culture where you had to prove yourself to earn your place and "pay your dues". They do not have good communication on performance, or guidance. It is a very sink or swim environment. I am currently a seasoned marketer at a top agency, and used to being in a large/fast paced corporate environment. This was a company I would never advise anyone should go to. The culture, pay, and hours are all cons and not worth having the experience on the resume. Additionally, I found no diversity on my team. I felt discriminated against which led to me being pushed out. If I could rate this review negative stars I would. Save your time, and please do not apply.

Viewing 94 - 96 of 83,690 Reviews

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