The absolute worst experience of my life. - Business Analyst (Salesforce Developer) Deloitte Employee Review

1.0
Jul 16, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Like most the reviews mention. Should be treated as a stepping stone not a place to work your life. Put in 2 years, get Deloitte on your resume and then double your salary for half the work at a different company. Not sure if that even qualifies as a pro, the pro is basically maybe you will get a better job.

Cons

Two faced everything. The PR is work your way, open and transparent, the reality is the opposite. The performance review for employees is basically an Uber rating of everyone you worked with. They get to rate you on a sliding scale, and check the promotion box or not. Have had managers say they won't check that box unless xyz. So once or twice a year your coach will meet with management for 5 min to say yay or nay. You do not get to be a part of this meeting. It's all very secretive and soviet. I did not have an actual performance review, money talk until 2 years in June 2020. That was after saying Jan 2020 I will be quitting June 2020. Management waited until June 1st 2020 to offer me a jump from 57k-67k. Which is already annoying because I told my boss, do not waste my time with a bad offer, just tell me no instead than insult me If the offer is less than %15 I will not even consider . When I declined I was asked what It would take to stay, I said 100k (150 - 200k in reality) they laughed at me, but then I quit and their smiles changed quickly. They were about to deliver an important project and I had all the knowledge and had warned them multiple times it would be bad If it was incapacitated. I already had 2 offers for 100k from other firms. Managers illegally pressuring me not to go on sick leave, I considered suing after my civil servant friends explained to me how very illegal it is to say things like that. "You could go on sick leave but we will have to cancel project, and your performance review is coming up so...". A big 4 firm had to cancel project due to 1 BTA, what a joke. That was during the April - May period, and I would cry myself to sleep often. Told my managers point blank work is giving me suicidal thoughts, and to expect medical leave soon (once I put in my two weeks, I went on medical leave for those 2 weeks). They had the nerve to call me while on sick leave and ask if I would work. During that period and other periods working at the firm it was 9-9-6, maybe even 9-9-7 sometimes. Often will just take 3-4 weeks of billable/utilization and just put it to another non-utilized charge code. In my mind this is just blatant stealing, number manipulation, ghosting hours, etc. I don't know why the time entry is so strict if it's all going to be ghosted anyways. The other Devs I had to work with were all fresh grads who knew nothing, I often just had to do their work. I would not recommend working here to an enemy or a friend. They would have to be a pretty bad person for me to wish them upon them. People that work there as their career are pretentious and closed minded.

Explore other reviews about Deloitte

5.0
May 11, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Loved the culture at the Costa Mesa office

Cons

Lots of hours if you don't say no. But you are learning.. so pick your poison

5.0
Aug 4, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

These folks know exactly what they are doing. They set high standards, and consistently deliver. Their project expectations and planning is excellent. The top level management folks are extremely smart and have a great sense of vision and planning. If you go to company social events (which are very frequent by the way), it is quite easy to have conversations with upper management people (Partners). Deloitte's hiring pattern is very consistent. For the young starters, they hire smart, well spoken, and subtly aggressive candidates. They have excellent training and knowledge management. They have a well oiled and empowered HR and Tech Support group. Things get done pretty fast. Their paid time off program is really great, and pretty straight forward. No messing about. They have a big social responsibility program that encourages volunteering. It also presents a great opportunity for youngsters to take event organizing responsibilities. This can be very very useful. Once, I volunteered for an event where we painted rooms for an orphanage center. There was a young guy who did the organizing. We were 10-12 people, with 3 senior executives actually doing paintwork. Quite unique. I have personally seen that Deloitte's top talents tend to start young, spend a 3-4 years, then take a hiatus to pursue a Graduate Degree (typically an MBA). The firm sometimes re-hires these consultants after their MBA with generous financial incentives. They offer much better packages to folks graduating from top universities. Sometimes they can offer huge joining bonuses. I worked in the IT consulting division.They tend to get top-end projects. On projects, the average age seems pretty low. A lot of 20-somethings, then there are a handful of 30-40 year old people and some senior Management folks. Beginner salaries can be a bit low. (which is expected. It takes some time to build credibility in the Consulting business) Overall, a great place to start your professional career. If you pay attention, you will get seasoned very quickly.

Cons

Work-life balance can become poor, especially during tight project timelines (This is expected in the Consulting Business). The employees have a significant amount of "firm-internal" training and knowledge contribution tasks. There are annual goal expectations. It can get tedious if you continuously work on high demand projects. There is intense competition, especially during targeted promotion/milestone years. There can be some backstabbing. It's part of the experience. It is not as bad as it sounds, and seems manageable. A lot of times, being young and inexperienced has it's flaws. The company has a simple way of seasoning consultants. They get pushed into high pressure situations, and they learn fast, and quickly start managing their own work. But they tend to be blind towards intricate details, especially in complicated IT product implementations. This has an interesting effect. If someone is able to do the hands-on work, everyone else tries to piggy-back on that person for their actual work. The hands-on guy gets overwhelmed, and others try to use him/her as a key resource. -- I personally went through a crunch project, and found a number of people "managing expectations" (piggy backing), while a handful of people actually knew the end-to-end solution and did the hands-on work. This created a lot more work and mental anguish than needed. Because of the expressed pressure, the hands-on guys have a hard time building and growing their reputation and subsequent performance evaluation rating. This also affects the project execution timelines. IMPORTANT: Make sure you thoroughly read through your employment agreement and understand the implications. In recent years, they have started hiring for specific projects ONLY. This falls under a particular "AMS service line". In this case, if your assigned project gets into a problem, you are exposed to the risk of employment termination. Their HR and Management are very helpful, and they will try to get you a new project. But there are several constraints like location, your skills, and limited time. I went through this, and it was somewhat unnerving. This was one of the reasons I ended up leaving the company.

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