Sinking ship - Anonymous employee Natixis Employee Review

2.0
10 Sept 2021
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Natixis provides flexible hours and has great benefits like 100% 401k matching and the health insurance is top notch.

Cons

The pay is below market and there are tons of open positions that are not filled. It is getting to a point where I expect some massive op risk event will happen. Regulators should look into key man risk at Natixis. If you're interviewing here, make sure to anchor high when negotiating your salary. When you're promoted at Natixis, counter intuitively, your salary and title do not change. Your responsibilities can double but your compensation will not change. Not going for a promotion is the winning strategy at Natixis but obviously that is bad for your career. Don't work here if you're ambitious. Work here if you want a job where surf the web and put in a few hours here and there.

Explore other reviews about Natixis

5.0
24 June 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Nice people Work life balance

Cons

None everything is great !

1.0
11 May 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

A lot of easy transportation options.

Cons

I'll be direct: Natixis CIB's management has a serious disconnect from market reality, and a recent job posting ("IT compliance and finance manager") is a perfect example of it. They are advertising an L1 IT management role — a squad lead position — with a requirement list that would challenge a senior director at a top-tier bank. Python, SQL, Informatica, Business Objects, Power BI, Easymorph, Sybase, CI/CD, Agile, data modeling, requirements gathering, budget management, Steerco presentations, compliance oversight, and direct people management — all in one role, all expected simultaneously. The compensation attached to this does not come close to reflecting that scope. Not even close. This isn't an isolated posting. It reflects how Natixis routinely structures roles: overload the job description, underpay the hire, and then use performance management as a pressure valve when the person — predictably — can't do everything. I have personally seen talented, experienced managers placed into roles like this and then PIPs'd out when they couldn't deliver the impossible. The PIP process here is not a development tool. It is an exit mechanism dressed up in HR language. Leadership operates in a top-down, Paris-driven model that is slow to change and resistant to accountability. Decisions that should take days take months. Technology choices lag the industry by years — the tools listed in this posting (Informatica, Business Objects, Easymorph) tell you everything you need to know about the modernization roadmap. If you are a strong IT manager with real skills and real options, do not take this role at the pay they are offering. You will be stretched thin, undervalued, and held accountable for systemic failures that predate you. The market will pay you significantly more for less frustration.

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