PwC reviews

3.7

68% would recommend to a friend

(75,247 total reviews)
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Mohamed Kande

78% approve of CEO

60% positive business outlook

PwC has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 75,247 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The PwC 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

75K reviews
1.0
Feb 19, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Brand name of US company PwC( this is actually illusion, its kind of franchise and back office to do documentation work)

Cons

- SDC acts a very cheap offshore team for PwC USA which throws JUNK documentation work or some minute works to be done. - They advertise themselves as PwC but not even one PwC policy is implemented and the entire culture is of Baring Point consultancy which was a junk company about to close and PwC acquired it.Though PwC acquired it, it is still being manged by baring point folks and it has its own HR and other policies which suck (Not PwC policies.). - There is nothing PwC in PwC SDC except the name which they keep shouting brand brand brand - No rewards, no outing parties. - No transportation facility - Managers are so dumb that they start hiring a technology person if client named a technology but once the project starts hired person will get to know that technology is no way related the project and client have used it in past. Manager will ask to work on the excel or whatever client ask even if is not related to your technology. - Don't join this company if you have similar offer in any other IT company. This company don't have any career growth. Most of things are fake. - Projects ? there are no projects here at all, All projects run in the USA and they will throw small tiny non challenging monotonous work here which will be our project! sorry sorry Task ! - Technology wise they don't know anything at all , they don't know the market because they can never get project themselves, that is there model : PwC US get projects , throws some junk work to PwC SDC bangalore. PwC SDC Bangalore can by itself cannot find projects , that is there working model. -The directors - they are a laughing stock many of them don't know to even communicate properly in English.According to them you should work on anything then only you will grow.Complete idiots.

1.0
Nov 20, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

"Big 4" on your resume. If you can put a decent one together, you will get a call back if you are looking for a new job. They have deep pockets. Expect things to be paid for (trips, phone, graduate school, dinner, etc.) as well as a decent salary. Unfortunately, money and a "prestigious" name is about all that WMTS can offer you.

Cons

HOURS AND TURNOVER: WMTS management will tell you that you need to work "60 hours a week, 12 hour days, and Saturdays" during busy season (mid January - mid April). It is more like at least 80 hours a week, 14-15 hour days, and weekends if you want to do well. You can scrape by with 65-70 hours per week if you are okay with getting average performance reviews. Non-busy season is about 40-50 hours a week. Some will work more though, since there is a ton of work still - hence the slackers really get to thrive during the summer. I have witnessed several WMTS "lifers" work 90-100 hours week regularly. Some years (such as 2014) the turnover is very high, approaching 30-40% for associates. This alone should be a red flag. There have been multiple instances recently where people have actually left WMTS with no other job lined up - essentially choosing to become unemployed over working there. QUALITY: As far as tax technical abilities, credentialing, and general competency, the senior associates and managers in WMTS are the bottom of the PwC barrel. About 90% of people who obtain their CPA leave within a year or two (transfer or new firm), and you will often find most of the practice relying heavily on the tax return preparation software. You will commonly see senior or managers spewing "input it in the software, and let it figure it out." This is an easy way for them to get out of explaining difficult concepts to their staff, as they more than likely are incapable of doing so. Speaking of the software, it is pretty poor. WMTS leadership will tell you that they "invest a lot in the technology." This is an absolutely load of crap, and they know it. They invest just enough to ensure that they can scrape their 7 figure profit off the top. They are so cheap with their software, that they force their employees to "test" it to see if it is working properly every year. This allows them to get a nice discount from the provider. During tax season every year, there will be dozens of "URGENT, CRITICAL" work around emails that come out when issues are discovered with the software. This leads to absolute frustration across the preparers, as the numbers are not "flowing" to the right places, hence they actually have to THINK. ETHICS: The ethics of senior management (partners) are very poor. They don't seem to have issues lying to their staff's faces regarding the opportunities within WMTS (there are almost none). They continue to sell WMTS as an elite tax practice, when that couldn't be further from the truth. WMTS employees are essentially overworked, over-glorified bankers, performing menial and repetitive tasks throughout the year. The only thing that this practice has going for it is that it can fly itself under the PwC flag. Management also don't seem to have a problem leaving their clients uninformed about super high turnover and client information breaches (tax sensitive information going to the wrong addresses - they prefer to sweep it under the rug if possible). Managers also will routinely tell staff to respond to IRS and state notices with incorrect or incomplete information. Managers have referred to this as "the industry standard." More like the WMTS standard if you ask me... bottom of the barrel again. Particularly, there is one engagement in WMTS that does not file the majority of their state returns properly. The seniors, managers, directors are well aware of this, yet they negligently refuse to file the returns because "that's how it has been done in the past." Again, industry standard, or WMTS standard? BEWARE of WMTS job postings claiming that you will do corporate tax, partnership tax, franchise tax returns, provisions, etc. This is a completely blatant lie, and I am not sure how they can even legally get away with stating that. You will prepare and/or review fiduciary and non-profit income tax returns. You will also make (I refuse to call this preparing. It is clicking buttons in a software system.) Form 1099s. That is pretty much it. INTERNS: Interns... oh the interns. WMTS hires about 100 interns from the greater Pittsburgh area to do their printing, stapling, envelope stuff, and general office functions. Typically the interns work from January until March. Some people don't realize how big Pittsburgh is. It is not very large - there are only about 5-6 major universities with good business schools that WMTS recruits from. Due to this, let's just say, the average quality of the WMTS interns is not what I would call good.

2.0
Nov 19, 2014

Enter at your own risk

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Work can be interesting, if you manage to grab interesting projects and clients. As long as everything is great, everything is great. It is a good starting position to better jobs; just don’t hang around too long. When you reach manager position or after five years (whatever comes first) leave or risk being stranded for a long time (industry does not like to hire overqualified advisers for in-house roles; even if you wish to reach a partner position, it is always easier to do this from outside by coming from industry then waiting for in-house promotions). Salary is a better as in industry and in other countries for the same position; but beware of a trap: together with promised promotions and occasional pay raises they will try to keep you in place so long that you become overqualified and no longer interesting for the industry. Then you become stuck in your position. If you are an actor, you will do great: threaten every year that you will leave the firm and you will be guaranteed a promotion, pay rise and bonus. Then act as advised above.

Cons

Politics - it is a boy's club (even if some boys are girls) and there are no real role models. If you don’t get the right boss to support your promotion you will not happen no matter how great your annual performance review looks like. Typical excuse is: “You’ve done great, it has been a tough year for the firm, maybe next year.” If you get right support you get promoted regardless of actual results. Typical official explanation to the team: “She/he has such a potential, we simply cannot afford to lose her/him.” Competition for clients and assignments between staff (also within your own team) is completely normal. Even worse is that this tactic is officially condemned and in practice encouraged by the leadership. Get ready to spend your vacation time checking your emails on hourly intervals just to make sure that your colleagues don’t steal your prime client whom you have been targeting with a new project for the last six months. Even if you are just on a business travel (or on lunch break) and a client calls your office phone, expect your peer to try to snitch the client of you. PwC requires long hours, but offer flexibility; this would be great IF the company wouldn't encourage “dog-eat-dog” culture. To summarize: you do have possibility to take days off, but you will be penalized for this. A lot of people have overtimes and unused vacation, because they are afraid not to be in the office. Unused vacation and overtime is written off at the end of the financial year – which is (conveniently) end of June. There is no long-term strategy; by the time people climb to the senior partner role they are old enough to look towards their retirement; all they are interested in is to take in money as soon as possible, before they are forced to quit the firm. Bosses are too busy to care (or they just don’t care). They follow the path of the least resistance: whoever comes first with a story about a coworker will be heard, no facts checked; you will then have to defend yourself and if successful you will be told to solve the issue with the accuser and not molester the boss again. Lack of professionalism and competence among HR - no matter what you wish to discuss or ask for a (job related) help, you are there on your own – what you will receive is a worn out phrase: “We can't help you here, but if you need anything, just let us know.” Despite what HR say, if you come to them with a problem, you are the problem. About 40% of staff are foreigners. PwC hires them, because they cannot find competent people within Switzerland. However, PwC does not recognize that these foreign employees are expats. You will be paid less than your Swiss equivalents. You might get a relocation package, if you are persistent enough. Afterwards, forget any kind of expat package or basic support like help with immigration or other authorities, help with income tax filing…

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