Good place to work for the right type of person - Risk Assurance Experienced Associate PwC Employee Review

3.0
Nov 17, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

PwC provides its employees with incredibly broad exposure to clients and industries, including most of the world's most prestigious companies. It's pretty cool knowing the most detailed business information about some of the most highly respected and admired American businesses. Training and support structure is very robust and there is never a time where you have nowhere to turn for answers. Coaching is very integrated into the PwC experience and you always have a upward place to comfortably turn for answers, advice, and guidance. Workplace technology is generally very good and IT provides state of the art laptops and external displays for work. While monetary compensation is not the best, the benefits package is broad in other ways including full cell phone with unlimited data, unlimited sick time, generous vacation and extended firm holidays, sabbaticals, maternity/paternity leave, and insurance options (including a very convenient legal option). Promotion and pay is highly structured and predictable (and therefore stable). Jobs are essentially 100% secure, unless you make some serious, serious mistakes consistently. Exit options are very strong as well, as long as you want to do something related after exit. One thing that is surprisingly good is flexibility. You generally have a set amount of work to complete each day/week. I've never had an issue leaving whenever I wanted for doctor's appointments, concerts, sporting events, or Flexed Fridays as long as my work was completed.

Cons

The work is incredibly boring and repetitive, especially in your first 5-7 years. I did not study an accounting or MIS related field and coming to work at PwC was a huge mistake. The firm has recently made a push into recruiting in other fields such as Economics, Mathematics, Engineering, and Computer Science but frankly the job has not come along enough to provide valuable and interesting work to employees from these backgrounds. HR and recruiting like to pitch the consulting aspect of our job to students, but we're really not consultants, unless you're working in the Advisory LOS. At the end of the day, I am an auditor through and through, regardless of working in risk assurance. During busy season, the hours can be very long (75+) which can be frustrating because upper management is always communicating how hard they're working to line up enough busy season resources. The pay is also not that great considering how hard we are expected to work and the challenging and stressful nature of the work itself. Associates often run budgets on engagements and are aware of what PwC is charging the client for their work. Associates normally cost about $180-$250/hour for the client. It's almost insulting to take home only about 10% of that amount or less per hour. The firm culture is not positive and most people seem to be very unhappy. I don't think a single day goes by where I don't hear someone joking about how much they hate their job or fantasizing about leaving. When someone does leave, it's the envious talk of the office. I think at the end of the day, the nice office, decent pay and benefits, and highly structured and dependable promotion scheme trap people into staying. 85% of my client contacts have been awful, miserable people. This work is highly client facing and I spend about 30% of my days interacting with contacts. I have found that most people automatically dislike auditors and it seems a lot of people who work in private compliance and risk are just generally disagreeable and miserable people. I can't tell you how many rude emails and phone calls I've had to smile through and endure. Exit opportunities, while strong in the industry, are weak elsewhere. If you intend to leave PwC and the accounting/audit industry, you had better do it no later than 2-3 years after starting or you will find yourself trapped. Additionally, my experience with PwC has been HIGHLY clique-y. Managers, directors, and partners quickly establish favorites amongst the staff (generally attractive, athletic, white males) regardless of actual work ability and intelligence. These favorites then get staffed on the best and most interesting work, or the work with the largest expense allowances (think $150 dinners). The nature of this work is then positively reinforcing allowing the favorites to be promoted more quickly. It seems the best way to succeed in my department is not actually working hard, but excelling at convincing others how hard you're working. Upper management is essentially 95% WASP-y white males who complain consistently about millennials, rather than trying to create a workplace consistent with today's working generation. PwC recently implemented a "Professional Framework" by which performance is evaluated according to 5 characteristics (Whole Leadership, Business Acumen, Global Acumen, Technical Skills, Relationships) Global acumen is essentially worthless. "Performance differentiators" highlight unique contributions to engagements. During each engagement, you receive a "Snapshot" detailing each of these categories being below, partially at, at, partially at, or at next level. These snapshots are reviewed during your Career Roundtable (which you are not present for) and this determines your promotion and pay. This is what bothers me most about PwC. Most engagement staffing comes down to luck or favoritism. If you're placed on new work, it is relatively easy to stand out and contribute substantially to work improvement and earn performance differentiators. If you're placed on a "bread and butter" client, for which we've been providing the same service for 20 years, there is essentially nothing left to improve. During your Career Roundtable, the upper management evaluate your snapshots and essentially assign you as a "1," "2," or "3," with 1 being the highest performing. About 1 in 30 employees is a "1." This then determines your pay increase. The Professional Framework was implemented to make performance, promotion, and pay more transparent. But at the Career Roundtable, upper management can still voice their favorites and override the Snapshots to assign 1s, 2s, and 3s. In my mind, this makes the Snapshots irrelevant. As long as there is a human component in the ranking assignment, I don't view this as a fair or equitable process. Best chance at promotion? Make sure you can talk football/hockey/baseball and smalltalk with old white men.

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Pros

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Cons

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4.0
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Pros

There is a lot about the firm that is great. It is a great culture that values collaboration (below the partner level), that truly values diversity of its employees, and that is very collegial. The Advisory business has grown significantly over the past 5 years since reconstituting a consulting arm with the acquisition of BearingPoint, followed by other large acquisitions of PRTM, Diamond and most recently Booz & Company (Strategy& - which is, actually, a dumb name for a company that garners eye rolls and open chuckling among the staff). The firm has also made smaller tuck in acquisitions as well to fill in small, but important strategic capabilities such as Ants Eye View (for social marketing, social media strategy, and social listening), and BGT (for digital marketing agency work). It is a place where you can build a great career if you can deliver great work, excel at networking across the firm, and can build partner support. Exceptional employees are the "average" here, so if you aren't knocking it out of the park all the time then you can expect to only be rated in the middle of the pack, and receive nominal raises and performance bonuses. It has a strong brand in the market. The firm's latest brand health index rated it at the top of the other "big 4" firms (Deloitte, KPMG, and EY) as well as other non-audit/tax firms like Accenture. The Strategy& acquisition added significant strategy consulting capability to position PwC to compete with the likes of BCG, Bain & McKenzie (who have little to no post strategy execution capabilities...meaning they are good at telling you what to do, but aren't really able to stick around to help you do it). Bob Moritz (Senior Partner) and Miles Everson (Advisory Leader) are great leaders who do a good job at inspiring staff to provide great, differentiating client service. They are personable, approachable, and genuine (if they are not, then they deserve an Oscar for their performances - oh, wait, we audit the Oscars...maybe a Tony then). They have a strong vision for how we will shift the firm to a global operating model over the next few years (today, we are a collection of member firms with each territory representing its own firm structure) which will enable us to better serve our clients, most of which operate globally today. All in all, it is a place that I am proud to work at.

Cons

As noted by many, and as inferred by by comment around individual performance above, if you want to get ahead here you WILL work your rears off. Late nights and weekends, with minimal complaining, are the norm for those who are successful. The firm has tried to add in concepts of "flexibility" into our work force - but that is generally ignored in practice by those people actually delivering client work (great thought, poor execution). I know that many complain about what they see as the professional equivalent of "sweat shop rates" when it comes to compensation - but I honestly think that is over blown. Sure everyone would love to make more money, but you can make 6 figures as a Senior Associate and almost $300K as a Director PLUS bonus...so, to me, the pay issue falls on deaf ears. The one area that I think we could really improve on is in the area of our 401K matching percentage which is currently $0.25 on the dollar up to 6% of your contribution. Many of our industry clients match dollar for dollar, so quarter for dollar is a bit of a slap in the face. The technology that we use as practioners, for the most part, is terrible with the exception of some of our new web enabled tools for pricing engagements and managing engagement economics. For the last few years there have been many hints and encouragements that we would be replacing the much hated Lotus Notes (that's right boys and girls, we are still using the best of 1990s technology for email and calendaring). There was a great deal of excitement and buzz in the firm - until we were told that we would not be moving to the standard...Microsoft Outlook. Instead - we are "Going Google". So, not only are we replacing one terrible system with another, we are not actually getting rid of Lotus Notes at all because 1) the Federal practice can't use gMail (the Feds won't certify the security of gMail's cloud) 2) certain accounts (like Microsoft) won't allow the use of Google products (Microsoft was so angry that they lost the replacement of Lotus Notes that we almost completely lost the account), and 3) the rest of the global firm won't be switching. So we will be having to manage two separate email accounts and will be forced to use the terrible Google Docs over what everyone else in the world uses and likes - Microsoft Office. Why did we select Google, one might ask. The answer varies based on who you ask. Some say it is because Google's cloud based tools will allow us to work in ways that we can't today for collaborating on the creation of documents and through Google's "Hang Outs"...this is ridiculous because Google's user experience is horrible (else, Microsoft would be losing market share to them in spades), and Microsoft already has the standard for collaboration through Link and Jive. Some say it is because Google's cloud based services provide a lower total ownership cost - which is also ridiculous because Microsoft has Office 365 available through the cloud with Azure. Some say it is because our technology isn't cool which is impacting our ability to attract talent on campus - which is the most ridiculous reason of all because who really joins a company because they can have a gMail account? Also, I'm honestly not sure how we will be expected to use these fabulous tools in an offline capacity when we don't have internet connectivity (such as on a plane that is not equipped with WiFi). The firm is also replacing its current performance management system (and process for handing out annual performance ratings and subsequent merit increases and performance bonuses) with a new system called the PwC Professional. Basically, they are replacing a tried and true system of documenting written performance feedback (which is good for not only developing people but also for serving as a record of what people don't do well in the event an adverse action needs to be taken against an employee) with a mobile app that captures a rating against five dimensions and which replaces written feedback with oral feedback that has no memory and no record. The "coach" who used to be responsible for representing their "coachees" at the Annual Review Committee time now has almost no role in the performance outcome of their staff displaced by the "relationship partner" who has responsibility now to personally know each and every staff member that they represent so that they can represent them to the other partner only "performance roundtable" discussions. Partners today have very little time for junior staff, let alone demonstrated interest in their individual careers. So now, a process that was cumbersome but was overly fair (you could only talk about things during ARC time that were documented - if it wasn't documented it was if it never happened and you had at least one person who knew you and advocated for you in the room when your performance was being discussed in the form of your Coach) and very transparent is being replaced with the equivalent of a papal conclave supported by a popularity contest. Additionally, this mobile app (Performance Snapshots), only requires commentary if a staff member is not meeting expectations or is partially meeting expectations...so if you are meeting expectations you can't even comment on performance unless you are highlighting a performance differentiator that they only expect less than 50% of staff to have. Lazy reviewers are incentivized through the design of the app to give everyone a meets expectations on all five dimensions and move on. Our attrition rate has been very low for a professional services firm - it will be interesting to see what happens to attrition after the next round of annual reviews using the new PwC Professional.

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