Management Disrespects Staff - Senior Consultant LMI Employee Review

1.0
7 Jan 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Loyal staff who remain despite the negative actions of senior management. Talented senior staff with many years of experience in government offering back to government their discernment and insight into the challenging issues faced by government. Until recent years, LMI was led by retired Generals or Admirals who understood leadership and how to motivate people; who shared risk, reward, and sacrifice faced by others; who maintained a relatively flat organization where even junior staff had an office comparable to managers and titles were not important.

Cons

Senior managers, led by the current CEO, who are trying to make LMI in the image of a smaller Booz Allen or Deloitte. Unfortunately with a smaller direct-charge base, LMI cannot spread its overhead costs across as broad a workforce, and so cannot compete effectively on a “low cost” basis, even as it adopts that as a business strategy and loses experienced talent from “grey hairs” that the CEO has said do not have a future at LMI. A recent move resulted in non-managers losing their offices and being assigned to cubicles. Adding insult to injury, staff were told that compensation would be reduced by 5% because of the need for “belt-tightening.” Yet, while staff are seeing compensation drop by $5,000 or $10,000 per year, documents show that the CEO has seen his compensation sky-rocket, receiving over $1.0 million in annual bonus on top of a salary of about $500,000. As the current senior consultants leave, it will become increasingly difficult to attract top level talent with government managerial experience to replace them. As an added note, there has been considerable grumbling about the move into a new "open work place" configuration -- on the same day that the Washington Post ran an article saying open work space (like we now have) leads to lower productivity, higher stress, and less employee satisfaction. Yet one Director told staff that "management is taking names" of those who complain. .

Explore other reviews about LMI

5.0
9 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great company with great benefits.

Cons

401k matching not available for the first year.

4.0
5 June 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

*Strong mission focus. Work is often tied to meaningful federal government priorities, which can make projects feel impactful. *Good work-life balance. Expectations are generally reasonable compared to many consulting firms, with less emphasis on excessive overtime. *Collaborative culture. Teams are often supportive and willing to help one another solve problems. *Exposure to federal clients. Employees can gain experience working across a variety of agencies and mission areas. *Flexibility. Many teams offer hybrid or remote work arrangements depending on contract requirements. *Less "up-or-out" pressure. Compared to some larger consulting firms, advancement pressure can feel less intense.

Cons

*Growth can depend heavily on contract needs. Advancement opportunities may be tied to available contracts and business demands rather than a structured promotion path. *Compensation may lag some competitors. Salaries can be lower than those offered by larger consulting firms, especially for experienced hires. *Internal mobility can take effort. Moving between projects or business areas may require networking and timing rather than a formal rotation process.

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