Great place if you excel at office politics and managing up - Vice President Moody's Employee Review

1.0
Aug 7, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Quite a few of the employees on the front lines of MIS & MA (analysts, research writers, economists, admin staff) are really terrific...hard working, have your back -- so you felt that sense of community and support, despite broader toxicity at management levels (departmental to c-suite).

Cons

A pattern and practice of actively promoting and hiring incompetent, ineffective managers and leaders. Despite significant talk about nurturing talent and promoting from within, Moody's often hires from outside the company for managerial & leadership roles, bringing in new staff lacking core competencies and skillsets to do the actual job. The key thread between those hired externally to lead teams -- as well as those who are promoted from within to lead teams -- is the ability to effectively “manage up” to leadership/play politics. By extension, if you don’t play politics well and dare speak truth to power, your tenure at Moody’s will be short-lived. One’s actual ability to effectively lead teams and offer an honest assessment of the business environment is relegated to the bottom of the consideration set in terms of value to the firm. So long as the company’s top brass are receiving sufficient buttering up, however, they fail to question how core departments & functions are breaking down; why morale is so low; the reasons behind wholesale departmental turnover; etc. Often, these same department leaders are charged with developing and implementing new processes and protocols, even as they lack a fundamental understanding of the work flows & impact to other functions & internal stakeholders (processes are often dreamed up with zero input and insight from these same stakeholders). And when the new processes prove to be fatally flawed (often misaligned to current state of the business and/or do not allow for appropriate phasing or transition), the department leaders double down on the ineffective process, rather than allowing for failure and recalibration to give it a chance to succeed. In response to the above critique, company leadership may well point to its annual employee survey as the method to gather these insights. However, I can attest that the results are often downplayed or messaged as the fault laying at the employee level (e.g. 'team is not coping well with change or department reorg’), and the teams that complete the surveys don’t get to see the full results. This lack of full transparency is disrespectful to employees who take the time to fill it out; it also ensures that there is no accountability from the managers/leaders creating the issues and thus no impetus to change direction. There was a once a point where Moody’s was a well-run, thoughtful organization – but that time has passed, and suggest you consider other firms to launch or build your financial services career.

Explore other reviews about Moody's

5.0
Jun 25, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Flexibility , WFH , Summer Fridays, BRG, Culture

Cons

No parking perks , No allocated desks

3.0
Jun 1, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Good company wide culture (see notes below on ratings specific culture) good people - Great work life balance (especially for finance in NYC) - Opportunity to learn from most of the c-suite - If you want the return offer you can usually get it (only know one person from my year who wanted one and didn't get one). - The ratings intern program is essentially gauging if your competent to extend a return offer. You don't actually do much work for your team.

Cons

- Can't touch anything an actual associate does because of regulations in industry (don't get exposure with what you'll actually be doing full time). - Because you can't touch anything you basically spend the entire summer being talked at by senior analysts (learned a ton but can get repetitive). - Hybrid schedule is only really adhered to by associates on your team, so the office feels deserted at times. The seniors don't come into the office much. The ratings floors (separate from the rest of the business) have a stale and silent feeling. - Because you don't really do much for your team it's hard to create relationships with them. - Your capstone project can be on a completely different industry then the one you're assigned to.

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