KPMG reviews

3.6

68% would recommend to a friend

(56,892 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 56,892 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 Administración y consultoría industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

57K reviews
3.0
Apr 4, 2011
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Training was good on an overall level, such as for the Tax code and concepts. Having the firm's name on your resume is absolutely required by some companies in and outside the industry for employment at higher, more senior levels. Management has a very high technical competency. Promotion is based almost exclusively on that particular factor (note mention of this in the "Con" section as well). The number and level of benefits is high, as is generally common for the industry.

Cons

Training on basic applications, such as proprietary software, and industry-standard software used by the firm was essentially non-existent. Managers generally have little or no interest in training new staff; the general attitude seems to be "sink or swim." As noted in the "Pros" section, management is very technically competent. Unfortunately, this is virtually the only factor considered or valued. People skills, training skills, and basic general management skills are, at best, considered irrelevant; at worst, they are looked down upon. Due to the nature of the industry and the personality types which are most suited to the work (especially compliance work), it is quite unusual to have both the necessary technical competence and people skills in the same package. Criticisms of work performance are frequently presented in hyperbolic terms, and can be startlingly personal in nature: "careless", "sloppy", etc., are frequently and casually thrown around even when there are a small number of insignificant errors. Accounting firms, especially Big Four firms, are known for a "churn and burn" culture: departures are frequent and tenures are not normally more than a few years. Due to a steady influx of young (and naive) students, there is very little impetus for change in the work culture. As an example, KPMG just recently allowed employees to begin wearing jeans on "casual Friday", more than a few years behind the curve.

1.0
Aug 20, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There is not one good reason to work for KPMG, unless you want to commit career suicide. You can find better.

Cons

1. Upper management - Too many levels, unlikely to voice any concerns on how projects are being run. 2. Senior management does not know what senior managers are doing in regards to running the business like a cheap MultiLevel Marketing scheme. 3. For an Audit firm they are not honest as they practice double booking clients, or at least some senior managers. 4. No work life balance - In fact was hired on for 40 hour weeks and then told that we needed to do 50 hour weeks to catch up on work (even though the client was charged for the extra time). This in normal project would be called going over budget or deadlines, this would not be a best practice exercise for companies who want to grow. 5. Not personable - very cold and corporate 6. Sarbanes Oxley is the only thing keeping this company floating.

2.0
Apr 7, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good social scene. Completely excessive, but easy to get to know people particularly new grads joining the program. If you're not particularly career driven it's a nice, chill place to be coming out of college I would say (this is completely the consulting side of things and not the accounting/finance side).

Cons

In the tech side of management consulting the work is beyond a joke. You are a glorified secretary at best, changing meaningless things on a power point slide, taking meeting minutes (that never get used), coming up with a list of questions for clients (that never get used), reaching out to people to ask are their contact details up to date for project proposals or organizing calls with people (which is quite depressing if you have a tech background/degree). The worst thing is you're given no choice but to do these things, there is no regard for your skill set or interests and you just get thrown these quite depressing/mind-numbing jobs to do, that in truth anyone with a functioning brain could do. If you worked a 5-hour week you'd probably get all the tasks you need done for the week. I would also say the emphasis on boozing and nights out sets a bad example for young grads joining the company (in my first week a senior manager said the first week of grads should be like a college freshers week). If you pursue other interests away from work and miss these nights out you're seen to be letting the side down, which in my opinion creates a school-like atmosphere of trying to fit in and conformity. Massively publicizing and encouraging organized grad drinking trips abroad also creates this school-like atmosphere of trying to fit in and creates this environment where trips and drinking are more important in work, which again in my opinion creates bad habits in young employees. You meet some genuine people but it's few and far between. Also, things like your accent and interests will be picked up upon if you don't come from or conform to the establishment types. (my manager on a project used to sometimes make fun of my accent on stand-ups). If you have any passion/interest in coding or technology in general don't even consider this as a first job out of college because you'll lose those skills fairly quickly with the type of work you'll be given.

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