Accenture reviews

3.7

72% would recommend to a friend

(177,225 total reviews)
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Julie Sweet

72% approve of CEO

61% positive business outlook

Accenture has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 177,225 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Accenture 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

177K reviews
4.0
Aug 20, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Strategy practice was hungry. Needed people to step up and lead projects. Great time/place for new recruits to develop leadership. Given ownership of work early on, opportunity to develop new intellectual property and have the work patented. Invited to help sell projects and other work. Time off when required. Travel constantly monday to thursday, but fridays were usually a down day and i spent most of them either golfing or playing play station. I racked up so many frequent flier miles that I've spent the last 2 years away from accenture flying my extended family all around the world, and I still have enough for two first class round the world tickets ... crazy!

Cons

Paid a lot less than traditional strategy houses. Hard to get noticed as a strategy practitioner surrounded by process and IT consultants. Also graded against process and IT consultants in promotion ranking even though you do very different work. always struggling to justify to other people why strategy people get paid more. always the same excuse why they can not pay you more "we have every consultant or manager in a band and you are at the top end of it". Puh - lease! they also price work below competition, so while your friends at McKinsey are staying at the Four Seasons, you will be staying at the marriott courtyard

4.0
Aug 20, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Pros: 1. Great people. Very bright. Want to do well. Willing to work as a team and contribute knowledge. 2. Interesting work. You can see how what you do will have a real impact for the client. 3. Paid time off. Managers get 6 weeks a year. 4. Cache. Accenture is well respected in the industry and having the name on your resume makes you more attractive to other companies.

Cons

1. Pay. They are very quick to tell you the pay is based on "market level" and not company earnings. I say a world class company should pay world class salaries. Average companies pay average salaries. If you are working your employees to the bone and the results of that work makes you a billion dollar company, share the love...I was recently approached by a defense contracting company in the DC area and they offered a salary that is $40k more than I am making now to do essentially the same work. Former junior colleagues of mine left the firm in the last year and are making $10 - 20k more than what ACN was paying them. 2. Flexible working schedules. The company has policies that support flexible working schedules. However, supervisors tend to develop their own interpretation of what's allowed and not allowed and like to blame it on "the client" (i.e., "The client would never agree to letting you work a 4-day week") 3. Performance reviews. Pay is tied to performance. However, the only definition of performance is the review your supervisor writes. If you and your supervisor don't see eye to eye...well, you can kiss that decent rating good bye and don't expect him/her to go to bat for you in the laddering sessions. We have so many other additional ways to measure performance (i.e., the results of the 360o evaluations, client feedback from QA sessions, recognition through the Celebrating Performance program) - why can't those feedback mechanisms be incorporated into a more holistic view of someone's performance and base the final rating on that? 4. Experienced hire knowledge not always appreciated, especially by those who "grew up" in the firm (i.e., started working there right out of college and have now made it to the executive level). If you are an experienced hire you should expect to be brought in at a level or two below where you think you should be. If you have ideas and experiences that are different from what the Accenture Delievery Methodology framework prescribes you are unlikely to be able to use them. (i.e., "where did you get that (insert document/template name here)? Did it come from the ADM? Well, use the version in the ADM")

5.0
Aug 20, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great all around compensation and benefits/perks. Solid company with a good and stable track record. You cannot be bored unless you work hard at it. The employee review process is the best I have experienced. If you spend any time with the organization and advance to management (as did I) you are over prepared for life in other companies when/if you leave and you will excel.

Cons

Long hours are to be expected and you still must earn your chops to advance. This is less of a downside than a "hello, this is how the world works". This may be a throwback to the way things used to be without instant gratification. It can take years of hard work to get recognized as you establish your reputation and track record. This is a downside if you're impatient or a new hire.

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