KPMG reviews

3.6

68% would recommend to a friend

(56,778 total reviews)
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Bill Thomas

82% approve of CEO

57% positive business outlook

KPMG has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 56,778 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The KPMG employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Management & Beratung industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

57K reviews
1.0
Nov 27, 2012
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-5 weeks of PTO and at times, flexible schedules -Learn a lot of technical skills in a short amount of time

Cons

-Work/Life balance does not exist. I worked in the Real Estate Tax group and management expected you to be available to work at all times, such as midnight in early November. When you are not in busy season, they will loan you or your support out to another group so even when you are supposed to have a 9-5 type of schedule, you do not. I believe a lot of this has to do with the partners getting pressure to keep everyone's utilization up -Zero appreciation for the work you do -No communication regarding staffing or changes within the group -Almost everyone below manager absolutely hates their job -No action is taken on feedback; they do not care about workplace satisfaction because they will burn you out until you quit because there are 25 people willing to replace you at any moment -The lack of variable compensation for the people putting in the most hours is terrible, if there even is any -If you are valued within the group, they sometimes block you from transferring to another group or doing a rotation -Mixed messages regarding how to use the offshore team and the associates -Poor planning leads to the same people being overworked or underutilized. Essentially, the better performer you are, the more work you get -Related to the point above, the few good people in the group become frustrated and burnt out, and leave -The partners only care about the bottom line, so you hear a lot about firm/group performance. However, when the firm/group does well, you do not share in any of the benefits. Why should I kill myself for a modest salary without overtime to make money for other people? -The ratings system is meant to be a 5-point scale, with 1 being the top performers and 5 being the equivalent of a pink slip. However, in this group, only 3s and 4s are given. These low ratings impact compensation and ability to do rotation -There are no real role models in the group for non-management. All of management has been there for 10+ years and have a very distorted view. Additionally, there are no minorities and very few women in senior management -For such a large and profitable firm, the benefits are very mediocre, especially medical and the 401(k) match -The firm rescinds any 401(k) matching contributions to employees that leave before spending 5 years with the firm. I realize they don't want to pay it for short-term employees, but given the mindset of burning out your resources, this makes the 401(k) match non-existent for most

1.0
Jun 9, 2011

Horrible place to work

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

good name in the market

Cons

awful managers and atmosphere in the firm

2.0
Aug 31, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Structured Career Progression Provides good training support for you to get a HKICPA qualification. Well known international brand Opportunity to learn about different businesses Earn resilience to working condition Opportunity to jump to another company

Cons

MAJOR -Operation 1) Structured career progression attracts people with little ambition - everyone is encouraged to think inside the box 2) Employee review system has management overrides - even if you are favorably reviewed on every engagement, a person who is on the wrong side of department head will still receive poor performance review and thus, lower salary 3) Combining factors 1 and 2, many middle managers gripe about their line of work is mostly forcing associates to work for free and to please the department head in whatever his whims 4) Behind a beautiful brand lay a byzantine information system that forces non-value added paperwork that we can not bill to job if overrun - more work (2010) 5)(Industrial Markets) Partners focus on cost cutting rather than increasing revenue - there are only a few partners who go out to bring business. Other partners just micromanage engagements and continuously increase audit costs (that we hide from our bottom-line anyway because no one is allowed to input real time used). Some partners after having problems with engagements extend audit work extensively but is unwilling to record the work or pay the staff. -Staff 6) Avg work hours 100hr/wk non-peak 120+hr/wk peak. Local-style partner abuse the international brand to implicitly have managers force associates to work for free until 4am but document work hours finishing at 6pm (free staff!) 7) Many colleagues begin to have health problems in year 2, most leave by year 4. There is a culture of active discouragement of work-life balance despite a superficial focus on paper. -Culture 8) The fact that audit is an industry based on ethic, the daily operation is morally wrong considering the promotion of values stated about and its extensive acceptance. MINOR -Partner 1) General English is mediocre especially up to partner level for local partners, and no intention to improve soft skills beyond paper. 2) Does not follow KAM (audit methodology). Add anything as she/he pleases. 3) God-like partner hierarchy discourage escalation of risk-issues and promotes sycophants 4) Poor management skills across the board. Management skills actually induce snicker as there is a common understanding that staff turnover is "Market condition." 5) Partners do not support the engagement teams. They put us at clients and let us take all the blame for decisions that partners make. we follow their directions and if we get complains, it is still our problem. 6)Partners do not help us negotiate better terms. While we hear about other firms treasuring their staff, in order to please our clients our partners sometimes ask us to do client's accounting tasks, a big NONO for conflict of interest! 6)Accepts below-acceptable fee engagements and always use excuses such as "strategic engagement" that has low margins and transfer the costs to having the staff working for free. Culture 7)Low morale (its already a minor issue compared with above!) because we are thoroughly convinced that management will take every loophole to pay us less. 8)Do not mention internal transfer unless you want to quit. They "lose face". They meaning everyone who is superior to your seniority. Operations 9) Paper in 2010? We uses reams and reams of paper and pretend that we are green. Managers and Partners are unwilling to do eAudit and asks explicitly to print the paper out despite policy of eAudit.

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