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Project Management Institute

Engaged Employer

Project Management Institute reviews

2.6

27% would recommend to a friend

(301 total reviews)
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Pierre Le Manh

31% approve of CEO

32% positive business outlook

Project Management Institute has an employee rating of 2.6 out of 5 stars, based on 301 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Project Management Institute employee rating is 30% below average for employers within the Administración y consultoría industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

301 reviews
1.0
Jun 1, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Pay and benefits are good. Many wonderful people happen to work here. Meet people around the world.

Cons

New CEO slashing teams left and right. Ongoing issues with lack of vision, siloed teams, constant sense of intense urgency, and little acknowledgement of resources as humans.

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Project Management Institute Response
3y
Thank you for sharing your positive experience with compensation, benefits, and the opportunity to meet and work with colleagues around the world. We know that change can be challenging. But PMI is evolving to respond to the needs of our community, and, like most organizations, we sometimes need to adjust our ways of working and structure of our teams. The recent changes resulted in numerous internal promotions and career progression moves, as well as a few role eliminations. Although we are experiencing very strong growth in almost all regions of the world, we have also recruited hundreds of new employees in the last two years. We remain committed to providing a good work-life balance for all employees.
1.0
Mar 31, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Organization has very dedicated, talented and pretty friendly staff and volunteers who work hard and deliver member value in spite of the management team. They have the industry standard in project management certification. Pay is ok, benefits very good, telecommuting excellent (for some), decent number of personal/vacation days that increases with tenure. Opportunity for travel if you are with the right department.

Cons

Different sets of rules and privileges based on where one sits within the organization. No advancement opportunity. Only laterals. HR knowingly supports unqualified and occasionally abusive management at the expense of talented staff leaving (often without another job) or being fired. There are groups that annually lose 40% of their staff year after year and hr and senior management pretends everything is just great. When organizational culture survey results come in with poor results, HR and senior management remove the questions from the next survey rather than addressing the issue. A couple years ago trust scored very low, so they simply removed it from the survey. Said it was no longer relevant. Rather than address a very real and growing culture of fear and mistrust, they changed the way they evaluate employee satisfaction. This is called unethical manipulation. The current culture, emanating from the CEO down increasingly since 2011, is that the boss must always be right no matter what. Questioning this ultimately leads to a written warning. If they want to fire you, management with HR's blessing uses fear and manipulation to emotionally degrade and manufacture a performance issue until the time period expires and you are terminated. My manager refused to develop written performance objectives with me as is called for in the employee handbook, and spent nearly three months trying to trip me up. HR's response to my concern about not having objectives was to "just do my job" . I did my job, but my manager manipulatively withheld email and verbal responses to time sensitive questions until the deadlines had passed, and only then responded to say that I had missed deadlines. I documented everything, so could see how these examples of performance issues cited in my termination letter consisted of instances where my manager manipulated to create a specific outcome, and HR fully supported the lying manager. Overall a lousy and unethical culture of dishonesty and fear that has become institutionalized. PMI is ok , I guess, if you have no ambition and just want to punch a clock, keep your head down and collect a mediocre paycheck. Sadly, I have a dozen or more former colleagues - all talented contributors in most cases for years - who had variations of this experience, and am sorry to say that I know a few current employees who are right now starting to go through this humiliating process.

1.0
Feb 6, 2026

Executive team ruining this organization

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Nothing at all. It’s a shameful place to be at.

Cons

The C suite are only here to syphon out the organisations funds. Recently they all flew to Argentina for a “meeting”- not sure why, because PMI has no offices there nor does any of the leadership team live there. But this is a regular phenomena where the “big guys” misuse member money to enjoy life. Nothing concrete ever gets discussed in these meetings. Promotions and senior roles are handed to people for reasons other than their skills and ability to do the job. There is a toxic mid-management rung that only engages in pleasing the C suite. Their teams below are neglected and are ordered around, handed responsibilities with no real decision making powers. Total lack of trust and micromanagement is the flavor of this rung of people. The CEO is fussy and temperamental with no real strategic direction. Teams waste time focusing on choosing the choicest of restaurants for him to wine and dine, putting him up in fancy suites and making him look good on social media. So much for responsible use of member dollars. The CMO… this one’s a joke. She hires and fires people for fun. Her current focus is on hiring a bunch of incompetent “friends and neighbours” from and around the west coast. There are regional heads who are hired only because they were past colleagues and friends of the C suite. Favoritism plagues regional teams. The organisation is run by fear and deceit. HR is rendered helpless and remains mostly non existent. The most ironic thing about PMI is the complete lack of project management practices internally.

Viewing 16 - 18 of 301 Reviews

Glassdoor has 391 Project Management Institute reviews submitted anonymously by Project Management Institute employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Project Management Institute is right for you.