AlixPartners reviews

3.4

53% would recommend to a friend

(804 total reviews)
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David Garfield, Simon Freakley and Rob Hornby

90% approve of CEO

67% positive business outlook

AlixPartners has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 804 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The AlixPartners 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

804 reviews
3.0
May 3, 2018

Anywhere but Accounting!

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

This company seems to really care about employees - and encourage career growth within the firm. Pay is Good. Benefits are good.

Cons

Accounting Department is TOXIC. Rest of the company avoids having to visit this department. Employees are very manipulative, and management continues to allow bad incredibly bad behavior. This department is always understaffed - and the employees are expected to work very long hours, while the leadership is rarely in the office 40 hours a week.

4.0
Sep 30, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Highly impactful projects. Board and CEO level access to high impact projects. - Perception with clients is that a "top-tier" firm tells us what to do and leaves, AlixPartners will tell us what to do - then do it. - Firm is growing fast fast fast. Turning down work because we just down have available people. - Perceived "higher compensation" is more a function of upside-down pyramid design of firm. The design of the firm is to have lots of experienced/senior director-level consultants. Very few, fresh out of B-school cadets. The result is high-impact work that generates significant results. Great if you're a seasoned consultant. Not the place to be if you don't have many years of experience under your belt and need training. - Strength of the firm (by design) is the director level. Most of the directors at the firm would be partners in other firms or senior executives in industry

Cons

- Awesome firm if you're a white male, below-par to terrible if you're not - Partner = sells work, nothing else. Firm completely lacks a 360 review process. Partners esentially have zero incentive to develop people or even be a decent human being. - Work-life balance is non-existent. Regional staffing, weekends, or family time mean nothing to the firm. - Titles are not uniform across the firm. In general, a director in TRS or EI is light-years more seasoned and valuable to a client than their counterpart in IMS or FAS. - Most partners are actually terrible at delivering work. Their job (by design) is to sell.

3.0
Dec 14, 2012
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The firm pays a significant amount of attention to using common sense. Since this is a smaller and relatively younger firm, the infrastructure has not all been set up yet, so people often operate with their own judgment vs. set firm guidelines. Since all employees are required to take an IQ exam and personality quiz as part of the interview process (based on the Wonderlic test amongst others), all employees are vetted by past experience and actual performance. This results in a group of extremely high performing consultants who have similar mindsets of getting the job done no matter what it takes. Everyone is also quite humble, down to earth, and family oriented (especially since the majority of the employees tend to have at least 5-8 years of experience when they are hired, but there are also some hires of people with 2-3 years of experience). The pay is probably better than most consultancy firms on average, simply because you get paid overtime and a year-end bonus, which amounts to a good portion of your salary. They also offer great healthcare benefits for you and your dependents.

Cons

Because of the older nature of the employees who also may have families to raise, there tends to be less focus on bonding and socializing out of the office and more of a culture of getting home asap after work. There is also somewhat generation gap between Directors and Associates who work very closely on the same team. In contrast to Big Four firms where the MDs and Senior Managers hardly interact with the Associates, AlixPartners has small teams where all members of the team from young to experienced work hand in hand. This generation gap also shifts the culture dynamics within a team as certain traits of a younger group may not be compatible with the ways of an older age group. Also, there may be more stereotyping of what a younger generation is or is not capable of. When being managed by people closer in age, they are able to judge abilities more accurately since the supervisor was would have been in the same shoes not too long ago. For people who join in the middle of the year, there is not much guidance or hand holding through the onboarding process. There is a 2-3 day orientation that gets you set up, but career growth, professional development, and finding engagements is all up to you after that. The buddy/mentor system is very fragile and not always set up properly. Therefore, employees need to take much more initiative to reach out to others and find out how the firm operates. The work tends to revolve around restructuring/bankruptcy most of the time, since that's what the reputation of the firm is in. Sometimes there are other types of projects, but these are the ones that get most of the attention and larger staffed teams. All practices of the firm (FAS, EMS, IMS, and TRS) could be involved in a single client. Sometimes the work is interesting, but at the lower levels, it could be just tedious and mundane. Since it also takes a while to be promoted in this firm, people who are quite senior could also be doing tedious or mundane tasks -- for example, it's not uncommon for Directors to be creating and editing Powerpoints or drafting up financial models. The firm also relies heavily on paper documentation and binders, which seems a bit old-fashioned. However, in working with law firms and bankruptcy courts, I guess this may be a necessary evil.

Viewing 127 - 129 of 804 Reviews

Glassdoor has 943 AlixPartners reviews submitted anonymously by AlixPartners employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if AlixPartners is right for you.