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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 3, 2019

Best you give it a few more years

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

This place is great for two kinds of people: 1. Those who prefer to just keep their head down and do exactly as they're told, with no opportunity to exercise the expertise you've developed in your career, and 2. Former Big 4 employees and/or ivy league B-school grads who couldn't actually cut it in corporate so they have to take what they can get.

Cons

As other reviews have mentioned, PMI is about 2 years into a digital and strategic transformation that has the potential to preserve their relevance in an increasingly crowded field, and among major shifts in the market that they should have anticipated and responded to long ago. But they didn’t. So now they’re running around like chickens with no heads brandishing bowls of spaghetti that they fling at what they think are walls. But who can be sure since they have no heads? This organization decided to take some ambitious, bold steps into new ways of working, confronting a threatened business model and diminishing domestic interest in their primary line of business (the golden PMP). In the process, they forgot to confront glaring cultural, process, and infrastructure deficiencies that have been an impediment from day-one. So what to do? Drop millions into name brand consulting firms, crowding out (literally and figuratively) the truly remarkable talent begging to be at the table. And then consecutively fire every single one of those consulting firms when they don’t deliver the miracles demanded by what seemed to be a dictator-like kingdom-builder (and his sycophants) whose hubris would have bankrupted the company if he’d been selected as CEO. Okay, so get to the point already. Here’s what you might experience if you accept a role at PMI: >Long-tenured, experienced, talented colleagues (some with PhDs in their area of expertise) reduced to ticket-takers, declawed and disillusioned to the point of hopelessness. >Those same talented staff pushed around by mind-numbingly dull new-hires who have “impressive resumes,” lots of business-world words (yes, synergies), and egos so large that its impossible for the tiny flicker of value they might be able to offer to shine through. >The overt perspective that negative outcomes are simply the opinion of he who delivers the news. It is very unpopular – actively frowned upon by some management – to acknowledge that an initiative or project is underperforming. Far better to obscure that reality and continue building upon a deeply flawed foundation, literally lying to senior leadership who probably know it’s a lie but are too complacent, negligent, or both to escalate. >And even a little bit of misogyny. Men in management literally raising a finger and shushing junior female staff who dare to disagree.

2.0
May 30, 2019

Transformation, exhaustion, and burn out

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Talented hard working people. Fairly decent pay. Travel perks. Good benefits. New CEO seems promising but time will reveal.

Cons

Technology out dated. Poor execution of strategy. Building old and out dated with insufficient space for current staff and visiting consultants, too many consultants. Executive team has no confidence in staff ability and seems to believe that things didn’t get done due to staff incompetence and not because of the cultural burdens of the past which hampered innovation and resisted change. Moreover organization seems ill fitted for goals. There is no opportunity for advancement due to small size and tendency of tenured staff to stay FOREVER. Unfortunately technology is very outdated which makes updates and integrations slow or impossible. Take a job here and be prepared to work long hours and wear multiple hats....burn out is real.

4.0
Apr 9, 2019

good working environment

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

good work ethic and work environment

Cons

pace of working could be increased

Viewing 205 - 207 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.