EY reviews

3.7

70% would recommend to a friend

(83,941 total reviews)
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Janet Truncale

79% approve of CEO

60% positive business outlook

EY has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 83,941 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The EY employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Finanzas industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

84K reviews
2.0
Aug 20, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I haven't worked with EY so cant really comment on the work culture. I am only talking about the recruitment process.

Cons

My review is only in reference to the walkin recruitment drive happening at Ernst & Young in Krishnarajapuram, Bangalore,India and not related to any other location 1. The recruitment process is very very very slow, they take at least 7-9 months to get back to a candidate in case he/she gets shortlisted. If you have given a interview and waiting for the result, better look for another interview call 2. Poor communication. They communicate only by phone calls and not by emails and blame you for not being available. which is weird 3. Walkins happens every week for the same position. It looks more like a HR training activity

1.0
Jun 4, 2014

Would never, ever recommend working at Egan LLP (EY's Immigration Law firm)

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The only good thing about working at this firm was some of the other clerks at the office. We bonded a lot over the sheer crappiness of our jobs, and I'm still close friends with several of my old coworkers. Oh, and there was often free food, and the company parties were good since we tagged along with EY.

Cons

There are so many cons I hardly know where to start... I guess it makes sense to begin at the top. The partners of this firm are obsessed with numbers above all else. They ignore crucial problems with firm processes and the overall culture of the firm unless there is some immediate financial consequence. Staff are overworked, miserable, haven't had a raise in years, and are quitting in droves? As long as the partners are still raking it in, nobody will bat an eye at the insane rate of turnover. Just look at the job listings... Egan is ALWAYS hiring. They can't retain staff because they pay ridiculously low salaries, expect people to put in massive overtime, and treat their staff as disposable. Many of the lawyers at this firm are absolutely incompetent. Of course they are, a firm that is this poorly run and disorganized has no hope of retaining top talent. They manage to (barely) keep things running by snagging accounts with companies that already use EY for other purposes, and are given the benefit of the doubt because of the association with EY, but the actual quality of legal advice and work is really . While I was there, some lawyers did extremely unethical things that would get them in big trouble with the law society if they only knew. For example, making huge mistakes on clients' applications, then covering them up... all in a day's work at Egan. I already mentioned the laughable compensation. The salaries are very, very low for the amount of work and the high level of responsibility that the clerks are expected to take on. The partner would act really put out anytime staff requested compensation for overtime too. For Christmas, a senior partner came around and let us each pick ONE chocolate from an opened box. That was all we got in terms of a Christmas gift or bonus.

1.0
May 31, 2014

FSO advisory senior

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Once you stop believing the bull they force down your throats, it can be a decent job based on tour project

Cons

- inconsistent management (mostly horrible) - "driving your own career" is bull, you go where they need you and it turns into project after project of things you don't have any interest in - Mich of your year end rating is bases on how much internal work you spend your free the doing aka they pay you for one job and get you to do two - much of advisory work are projects no one with a brain would be interested in (testing, document reviews, ect) - reviews are drastically different from project to project and lower level employees can get easily screwed by circumstances beyond their control - many projects have unnecessary travel requirements. Pretty hard to stay motivated travelling every week to do work a monkey could do and that you could do from your bed

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