Infosys reviews

3.6

67% would recommend to a friend

(122,453 total reviews)
avatar

Salil S. Parekh

72% approve of CEO

66% positive business outlook

Infosys has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 122,453 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Infosys employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Tecnologías de la información industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

122K reviews
2.0
Feb 15, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

good internal material for learning and training yourself.

Cons

I got hired onsite because their visa applications were getting rejected left and right after they abused the system. Many projects were being lost (.i.e, positions were being filled by local staffing firms). They were in a bad spot and accepted my salary demands and agreed that I need not relocate to different locations. But now with them starting this new Global Compensation Model (GCM), I am being ready to leave incase my salary is reduced. They recently started the new Global Compensation Model (GCM) for existing and new employees globally. If you join the company, it is possible that when your project changes, your role and salary will change. For eg, if you join the company with a position of technology lead with a salary of 80,000, they could be assigned to a project a week later which requires only a senior programmer so then your "role" changes to Technology Analyst (though offficially you are a technology lead) and salary changes to that of Technology Analysts (say $75,000). They are doing this because they noticed that most of the client requirements are for developer fill-in positions (In short, Infosys plays the role of a staffing firm in most of the cases) and they have lower margins with technology leads taking developer roles. They make it sound good by saying that if you perform the role of a PM, then you get the role and salary of a PM. But seriously, that's just a carrot to get people to accept this change unlike the iRace change which created a lot of bad sentiment and immidiate negative reaction across the company and media. Besides, there are plenty of PMs and Technology Leads around. So if anyone is joining the company, be aware that the salary you may change if you change your project. Another thing is that they expect you to work more than a normal work day. For eg, they expect you to do additional work at home for other projects or offshore teams...that's because they want to get the maximum productivity and bang for the buck out of each person hired onsite. They already do this with people brought from India because they have less demanding power. They don't understand personal life outside work. They've tried many times to get me to work late night with offshore teams who are not part of my project and all but I refused because I know that if I want, I can easily get a job else where. After they got a taste of my push back, they haven't bothered me much.

1.0
Aug 22, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

5 Great reasons to join infosys: 1. You are a FRESHER: If you have no work experience, this is a great place to get some skills, and work experience. If you are unsure about higher studies, this will definitely help you make up your mind. You will have a lot of fun during your initial training and will cherish those days forever. The fun end here. At the end of your training, you have a 50% chance of being placed in a stream that is totally differnet from what you were trainined in, and you will have to learn everything new on the job. Miscommunication at the higher levels is to blame. 2. You are a LATERAL: Congratulations if you are joining as a Team Lead or a Manager. Life is good. Team Leader: This is where you learn how to force people into submission - through threats and escalations. Its easy to become a manager within a year or two if you have no conscience. Manager: You attend meetings, conference calls, open spreadsheets and order people around. Subordinates make documents, which you review and sign with your name and pass on to the clients and hope that they like them. Anything goes wrong anywhere - blame a subordinate. He/she doesnt listen to you and has an attitude problem. 3 ONSITE Opportunities: These are limited... and you usually have to very servile to your managers to get one of these. Gifts, remembering birthdays, sweet talk.... thats the mantra. Performance is secondary, but just acceptable is enough. 4 Huge Campus: Yeah, a change from a concrete jungle. The walking and the distance can get on your nerves though. 5. Facilities: Gym, swimming pool and a choice of many food courts. Be a little cautious of what you eat though. I've seen flies, roaches in rice and veggies and even heard of coins and keys being found in soups and curries.

Cons

1. Poor quality of work: You never get to do what you like. You may be trained for 3 months on one stream (J2EE for instance), but will be expected to perform on another ( for instance .NET). This happens half the time. Around 20% of the time, you will be asked to do nonsense, like generate a report, make a document or something like that which has very little to do with your work. The client is always billed for the effort, and the value added is NIL. In projects such as AT&T, half the people are known to sit idle most of the time. Business Analysts are paid 5 times as much as engineers, but often sit and work with them and do the SAME thing that they do, even coding. The client is royally billed. 2 Bureaucracy: You are expected to kiss a##. No, really. The vibe you get when you go to talk to a senior manager is the same as what you would get if you went to get your drivers licence renewed (If you are from india you will understand). First, you must beg for permission to talk to them. When you DO get your chance, speak to them like you used to speak to your junior school principal or be damned! 3. Appraisals are meaningless: The feedback is literally fed from the back. Most of the time, it makes no sense, and asking for a clarification only makes things worse. People have been branded with having attidude problems because they asked for clarifications. 4. Promotions / Role Change: The appraisals dont matter much for your role change. There is an annual comparitive ranking survey seperate from your appraisal that decides everything. This happens behind closed doors so you have no clue what was spoken about you and you have no say in it. You are not allowed to ask for clarifications, let alone challenge the ratings. 5. False Promises and Frequent change of policies: Policies pertaining to promotions, career advancement, compensation etc change as frequently as the weather without any warning. Often unannounced! Rumor has it that a batch of junior engineers were denied the promotions they had been promised at the time of hiring. After a hunderd engineers submitted their resignations within a week, the management woke up to the fact that they could not train so many people in such a short a span of time and hurriedly approved their promotions.

1.0
Jan 29, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Struggling to find any pros. One good thing is if you are a recent graduate here you can get some experience granted they find a decent project for you. Get ready to lie. Yes lie! Infosys’s managers will ask you to bump up your experience, even if you have none, just so they could charge clients more for your spot.

Cons

Does not matter how hard you work your work will not be appreciated. Yes you will get a pat on your back but that’s it. Does not matter if you spend extra time after work hours, does not matter if the client is super happy with you and keeps sending emails to Infosys praising your work. None of it matters you will only get your standard 1.5 or 3% increase. Which to most people will be around 1700-1800$ Actually if you do good and client is happy with you Infosys will charge the client more after first 6month and they will keep increasing charge without rewarding you. They typically charge 3 to 4 times of what they pay you. Yes you are reading it right. Infosys will pay you around 30$ per hour BUT will charge clients 90-120$ bucks per hour per one fresher and then at the end of the year they will give you 0.45 cents increase. So instead of 30$ now you are making 30.45$.

Viewing 70 - 72 of 122,453 Reviews

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