PwC Senior Associate reviews

3.6

69% would recommend to a friend

(8,633 total reviews)
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Mohamed Kande

79% approve of CEO

60% positive business outlook

Associate/Senior Associate employees have rated PwC with 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 8,633 company reviews on Glassdoor. This indicates that most Associate/Senior Associate professionals have a good working experience there. PwC is rated in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) by Associate/Senior Associate professionals compared to other employers within the Finanzen industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

9K reviews
2.0
Dec 21, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Work with very intelligent, motivated individuals - Gain a broad range of experiences across many industries - Experience many different work situations; makes you a rounder individual - Work on high exposure projects / clients - The name on the resume is truly a great thing; made finding a new job one of the easiest searches in my career

Cons

"Work/Life Balance" is this fun phrase senior managers desperately want you to believe if they repeat it to you over and over; fact of the matter is, it's basically nonexistent. While you are experiencing another "great opportunity" for your career traveling to some remote part of Kentucky 4 or 5 days a week for months on end, I certainly hope you don't plan on having any life in your hometown. It's a perfect fit for you if you are single, have no friends, and enjoy waking up at 4am every Monday morning to catch a flight for the rest of your life. Senior management is the loudest in the room when times are good, but when times are tough, suddenly they're secretive, secluded, and very hush-hush. They'll make all sorts of press releases and announcements when they're doing good deeds (not to mention a literal parade march up Market Street to hand-deliver a charitable donation to Mayor Nutter), but suddenly keep quiet and secretive when partaking in the not-so-good deeds, such as performing layoffs. It is a very 24/7 culture - be prepared, even while on vacation, to respond to your Blackberry. On that note, it's probably best to not even take vacation, because it counts directly against your utilization metrics for the year (a very important factor in your year-end reviews). Also be prepared to hear the phrase "high performance culture" in every communication you get from leadership. I used to think that this meant that I worked with the best and the brightest, and while that is true, I finally realized this was simply code for "white collar sweatshop". Pay seemed decent at first, but when all quality of life factors and 80 hour work weeks are considered, it is a pittance. Management will occasionally try to keep morale up or make you feel that you are being fairly rewarded by giving small bonuses or, more bizarrely, an iPad; I'm sorry, but an iPad doesn't really make up for the number of late nights, holidays, and weekends employees are expected to sacrifice in the "high performance culture" of PwC. Internet traffic is monitored by Ethics and Compliance, so never visit a blog like re: the auditors (or any site that would dare badmouth PwC) on a firm computer. While I never experienced this personally, several of my colleagues received threats from Ethics and Compliance for reading that blog.

4.0
Dec 17, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Excellent working environment, with an amazing learning curve effect.

Cons

Work life balance sometimes is not as good as expected, and the work load is heavily impacted by the staff turnover.

5.0
Dec 16, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You work with motivated people. Mostly that motivation comes through fear, habit or ambition, rather than true appreciation for what you are doing, but it sure beats working with/for people who go to work to kill time until they get to leave. Granted, those people still exist, but the culture is such that those types of people are rewarded and will end up leaving the firm. I work with bright people on things that are interesting or intellectually challenging. So, the work is doable. Compared to other big 4 firms, I feel safer knowing that we had fewer layoffs and bigger raises than many competitors. Much of that is attributable to luck I am sure, since we lost fewer large clients to the financial crisis--PwC audited BOA and JMPC, not Bear Stearns and Merrill. Culture is conservative and focus is to perform quality work. I feel like we spend a good amount of time getting the right answer rather just a documented answer-which makes me more comfortable working here. I get great exposure to senior levels up the pyramid given my current level within my specific group--which is much more flat and avoids the more bureaucratic structure other may experience. My compensation is fair and I feel like I have people for whom I have worked that I can rely on to present my case at year end for reviews.

Cons

Public accounting is pretty miserable work. Little benefit to society comes from the work. It's a cynical view, but I view this profession (public accounting: audit/tax) as a regulatory or cost-of-doing-business tax paid in order to get capital to do REAL things in the economy. So, it's not often that I get to go home at the end of the day feeling like I've contributed to society. On a more material level, the benefits are horrendous. The best medical plan for a family is >$500/month and still doesn't include a co-pay for emergency room visits (a change they slid in from the prior year's plan without warning even when raising premiums $100/month). So, stitches for my toddler cost me $700 (after deductible and 10% of the remaining balance) even though I'd spent around $6k in premiums. No Roth 401k like some Big 4 competitors. I don't understand why there aren't more of these. And contribution match is laughable - 0.25% of what you contribute, up to 4% of my income. Pretty standard for Big 4, in that 401k are very bad because they expect you to leave anyway after a few years.

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