KPMG reviews

3.6

68% would recommend to a friend

(56,837 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 56,837 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
2.0
Aug 15, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

*Great HR department, most HR/IT processes well thought out. *On boarding of new staff well designed and helpful. *Ability to work from Home via a well design VPN system. *Expense and travel systems easy to managed and work out. *Recording of Time (utilisation) system great, so easy to work and use *Mentoring program available, but you really need to make sure you push and personally manging the mentor for it to actually happen. *Learning system/Education - Have a fantastic learning system, that you can do online training, check out books of the KPMG Library, book KPMG training and non-KPMG training (though both of these need to get approval from your line manager, the non-KPMG training you need to provide a case) *Very supportive of Accountants, or staff doing ACA and auditors. See con for downside.

Cons

*Top heavy structure, limited room for promotion. *Limited support for IT, Change Management, People etc Advisory groups. As Accountants trump all, this has left KPMG being viewed as only auditors in the market place. *To get bonuses or promotions a need to have been hired by a Partner, or being working directly with a partner. Otherwise the twice yearly senior management moderations on staff performance will mean that you have no effective support during this critical assessment. It is clear that most (80/20 rule) staff with low performance ratings usually are actually not poor performers but unfortunately do not have direct partner sponsorship. However there is a great PIP (Performance Improvement Plan process to help, but usually this is not needed as your rating had no real reflection of you actual performance or how the clients saw you) This is because the twice yearly assessment process while designed to be based on competencies by HR, is overridden by the partners and senior managers’ moderation process. The core feed to the moderation is evidence of performance from each engagement review and your utilisation numbers. Client feedback even if glowing is often not taken into account, as this will be diluted out by the engagement review process. If you do not have a partner supporting you during this process, it does not matter how well you do, even if you get the top ratings throughout your engagements, you line manager loves you. They bell curve the ratings so if the partner wants to push someone else you will get a poor performance rating regardless. The engagement reviews (project reviews) while having the necessary flexibility are very arbitrary assessment by the engagement manager (I know as I had to provide several myself). These assessments are poorly controlled for bullying and have no spot review of engagement managers assessments throughout the year (so while you can dispute a review, this effectively a re-review by the same engagement manager, or even if another manager/director they cannot change the review so you are stuck with the assessment regardless). Unfortunately this means that many engagement managers get into company politics which are reflected the reviews. For instance: London staff who are working on jobs up North for Northern engagement managers will get poor engagement reviews regardless, as Northern Engagement managers want to ensure north staff get better reviews on the whole, as performance is measured across the group country wide. So it pays to give bad reviews to staff you do not manage, to make yourself look good on the whole. *Utilisation targets have been increased dramatically, this means senior managers, directors are not able to spend their time getting the sales through proposals as they need to have much higher billable hours recorded. The targets are that significantly high, that they have started to do work 1-2 levels down from their position to meet their financial targets. This has meant that staffs at lower levels are no longer getting the experience to grow and learn on the job.

1.0
Oct 14, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

KPMG can be a great opportunity for recent colllege grads who are looking for audit, tax or consulting opportunities. The work life balance at KPMG has been a big plus, although recently the option for working from home 1 or 2 days a week has been withdrawn for IT employees.

Cons

Unfortunately tough times have led to: multiple rounds of layoffs within IT, bonuses are non-existent and salary raises are rumored to be frozen. Flexible work options like working from home 1 day a week have been cancelled. All training was cancelled and no one is allowed to take any training courses. Departmental and team meeting budgets were eliminated - so no teambuilding activities or even lunches anymore. Smaller perks like the annual Thanksgiving turkey give-a-way and summertime ice cream giveaway were eliminated. Morale is awful and rumors of continued layoffs in Jan or Feb of 2010 will likely keep employees on edge. Aside from the current economic climate and effects on KPMG, the overall IT climate is focused on outsourcing US jobs as a strategic initiative. Frequent re-organizations have led to overall slowdowns in any tactical or strategic projects, as well as focus management more on empire building/saving. All in all, I would advise prospective employees to wait 2+ years for things to settle down and for business to get better, hopefully leading to a return to a normal business climate internally at KPMG as well as to more material rewards i.e bonuses and perks.

1.0
Oct 11, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Working for KPMG proves that you are a strong candidate with the ability to roll up your sleves and get the job done. You also get access to the books and records of some very reputable clients that provide meaningful experience for your career later on down the line. The other professionals working with you are you're greatest resource and are exceptional friends and colleagues.

Cons

Prepare to have no life outside of work. Never in my life could I have ever imagined working this much. You work on weekends, sometimes 7 days a week, often times without charging the time or getting recognized for putting in the effort to meet unreasonable budget and time deadlines that your managers will never commend you on. Prepare for 40-55 hr work weeks during summer and 80-100+ hr work weeks from September-April. Your clients will never be pleased to see you, no matter how good you are, and they will in fact make that known to you at all times. Some are often very difficult to work with or get the right information from. On top of everything, the salaries they are offering are much lower than the mid tier firms for some unknown reason and when you calculate the number of hours you put in compared to your pay you might be making somewhere near $12/hr while they charge the client $350/hr for your services. They give you 25 days PTO but implemented 7 days of mandatory PTO, further reducing your paid vacation/sick time to about 18 days. Its not uncommon to get bad performance reviews for taking PTO at times that are not advantageous to the firm. For example, if you book a vacation a year in advance and due to client push back the engagement doesn't finish on time but you leave for vacation, that will negatively be frowned upon no matter how out of your hands the situation may be.

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