Flexible work options hindered by poor information sharing - Anonymous employee Moody's Employee Review

3.0
26 June 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The company offers flexible work arrangements, including Work from Anywhere and Summer Hours, which support a better work-life balance.

Cons

While my manager verbally claims that information is being shared with the entire team and presents themselves externally as someone who is actively coordinating and consolidating the team’s work, in reality, my manager only shares information with a select group of favored members within the team. As a result, these members are then required to pass on information to others on a need-to-know basis, which creates inefficiencies and unnecessary uncertainty. This intentional imbalance in information sharing leads to various negative impacts, including wasted effort, operational inefficiency, reduced motivation, and increased anxiety among team members. Furthermore, even when a team member who learned information secondhand raises the issue with my manager—stating that the information had not been shared with them—my manager tends to offer a temporary apology and appears to acknowledge the issue in that moment. However, the same pattern of selectively sharing information with preferred members resumes shortly thereafter, and this situation occurs frequently. Despite the fact that regular team catch-ups are held, the continued selective sharing of information appears less like an oversight and more like a deliberate choice. While it is understood that not all information needs to be shared with the entire team, information that materially affects day-to-day work should, at a minimum, be communicated to relevant members. Given that my manager promotes “transparency” both within and outside the team, the current imbalance in information sharing—particularly concerning work-relevant matters—has become a significant source of distrust among those who are not being kept informed. In addition, AI initiatives are heavily promoted, but the associated workload is high and the tangible benefits are minimal, making it feel like more of a burden than a productivity gain.

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5.0
14 June 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good benefits, life-work balance, culture, and growth opportunities

Cons

Standard large company challenges (slow decisioning, delays, etc)

3.0
1 June 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Good company wide culture (see notes below on ratings specific culture) good people - Great work life balance (especially for finance in NYC) - Opportunity to learn from most of the c-suite - If you want the return offer you can usually get it (only know one person from my year who wanted one and didn't get one). - The ratings intern program is essentially gauging if your competent to extend a return offer. You don't actually do much work for your team.

Cons

- Can't touch anything an actual associate does because of regulations in industry (don't get exposure with what you'll actually be doing full time). - Because you can't touch anything you basically spend the entire summer being talked at by senior analysts (learned a ton but can get repetitive). - Hybrid schedule is only really adhered to by associates on your team, so the office feels deserted at times. The seniors don't come into the office much. The ratings floors (separate from the rest of the business) have a stale and silent feeling. - Because you don't really do much for your team it's hard to create relationships with them. - Your capstone project can be on a completely different industry then the one you're assigned to.

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