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Accenture Federal Services

Part of Accenture

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Toxic Company Culture - IT Analyst Accenture Federal Services Employee Review

1.0
27 Sept 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

good pay in certain departments but very poor pay in others; offers standard benefits package and discounted company stock

Cons

C Suite clearly only cares about putting money in their own pockets; place incredibly understaffed because "AI is the future"; Leadership and IT managers are incredibly toxic. There is no communication when there are issues and when you say anything that goes against their beliefs, they lash out. Several teams received complaints because they were laughing and conversing at work; the complaints were passed through the grapevine and not actually addressed by the manager who made them. New IT director doesn't know anything about IT as he has been a consultant his whole career. Causes significant issues in all IT departments because his go to solution is to ask how AI can fix the issue even though he doesn't understand what that means.

Explore other reviews about Accenture Federal Services

5.0
3 June 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good compensation for early career

Cons

Need to manage politics at the company carefully

3.0
5 Feb 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I genuinely enjoyed much of my time at the company and worked with smart, dedicated teammates. In my later roles, especially as a Principal UX Designer, I had significant autonomy, owned strategy and design decisions, and was trusted to lead complex work. Leadership on my most recent contract was supportive, and the scope of work was engaging and impactful. When conditions were right, it was a great place to do thoughtful UX work.

Cons

Experiences varied significantly by contract and leadership. Earlier in my time as a UX Researcher, teams were overextended, heavily micromanaged, and often received feedback that was not actionable or outcome driven. Career advancement is challenging, particularly for those who take maternity leave, and promotion paths lack transparency. Ethical alignment was also a concern. Partnerships with vendors such as Palantir, given their involvement in ICE surveillance and other government programs widely criticized by human rights organizations, conflicted with my personal and professional values. Additionally, company wide communications around Israel and Gaza lacked nuance and empathy, expressing support for Israel without acknowledging the humanitarian impact on Palestinian civilians, which was painful and alienating for some Arab and Muslim colleagues with friends or family directly affected by the violence.

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