Aquilent Reviews

3.2

51% would recommend to a friend

(77 total reviews)
avatar

David Fout

60% approve of CEO

45% positive business outlook

Aquilent has an employee rating of 3.2 out of 5 stars, based on 77 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Aquilent employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

77 reviews
3.0
28 Apr 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Some talented and fun individuals, good flexible work schedules,decent health benefits, decent events, some access to new technology depending on your project and permission to access it. Decent bonuses every year. Fairly stable industry.

Cons

A reviewer mentioned earlier that it is a "clique," and he or she is right. Only certain people are assigned the best projects and are allowed to move up to management roles. If you disagree with their opinion on a strategy you are done for. Decisions are made regardless of expertise, best practices, or standard operating procedures. The company mentions training, but very few people are approved for training funds. There is an overwhelming "fear of the client," that blocks you from doing anything that may actually be beneficial to the client and organization. It is not uncommon for employees to not have access to critical information or critical clients because of this fear. Expect to be blocked from meeting clients, talking to clients, accessing data information, blocked from critical meetings etc. Unless of course you belong to that clique, or suck up to that clique. Pay is lower than regional or industry standards, projects are often dull and based primarily on busy work, and there is a fairly high turnover.

1.0
9 June 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

They have a gym for employees to use.

Cons

Management is absolutely clueless about software development --especially their CTO. Aquilent hires developers and their CTO is so afraid of having them write software that they get stuck doing mindless tasks or fighting with technology that was never meant to be customized. The biggest problem is their CTO and the clique other folks have mentioned. They're so confident in their opinions, yet have a track record of failure. They're the biggest group of narcissists I've ever had the unfortunate experience of working with. There are few growth opportunities unless you join the mindless drones that already live in their management team.

1.0
16 Apr 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Great benefits. - Great pay (but negotiate because raises don't come easy.) - Cost of living pay increase - Profit sharing - Great ideas for employee growth - Social events - Flexible hours - Telework options

Cons

Management of projects is more important than morale amongst the troops. It's easy to feel like a worker-bee in a beehive. This particular beehive considers itself top of the industry despite Aquent, Booz, CGI, even Accenture running circles around them in the same town and internationally. In this particular beehive, employee suggestions that are contrary to project leads are NOT welcomed as straight shooters who want to get the job done with little politics, mind games or micromanagement. Aquilent encourages the "big fish, small pond" mentality amongst its management. Many leads who do not have the mentality have left out of frustration in the last few months. Project higher-ups are limited by their arrogant, limited view and experience as most of the management are ex-government workers who were pigeon-holed. They do not appreciate experience or skills they are not familiar with and therefore have a difficult time allocating certain skill sets they are not familiar with or ... feel threatened by and cannot micromanage. Employee internal & external training and development programs are great ideas and very poorly executed. Project higher-ups don't encourage employees to get certifications even if it benefits the project unless you're part of the cliquish culture. The same cliquish culture that make the otherwise fun social events a struggle in human interaction. Asking for direction and the lay of the land is frowned upon in this sink-or-swim environment. Those who drink the kool-aid submit to poor decisions and the "leadership" of higher-ups. Aquilent uses the term "worry transfer" when referring to the way it takes on government client tasks. It also takes on the clients culture and inability to make the most efficient decisions where it's no longer problem solving, it's work-around creation to maintain the status quo. HR is there to protect the company not help employees feel valued as they are part of the clique-ish and elitist culture who look at employees as bodies and worker-bees not resources. It's difficult to jump on other projects despite what they have you believe as well. Last con: This isn't the first review or expressed opinion stating the aforementioned long standing issues. Left to fester, the company morale will continue to tank, the attrition, currently at 25%, will increase and all the hard and good work will begin to diminish. Also word travels fast in this industry.

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