Sogeti Reviews

3.2

53% would recommend to a friend

(2,008 total reviews)

Christophe Bonnard

38% approve of CEO

35% positive business outlook

Sogeti has an employee rating of 3.2 out of 5 stars, based on 2,008 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Sogeti 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

2K reviews
1.0
28 Feb 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Started off well with lots of promises and the allure of benefits until they pulled the sheet over my head and sucker punched me. Granted, I did start on a project with a good technological foundation and I was able to work on a team with a few pleasurable personalities.

Cons

My friend referred me to the company a few months after he started there. We were both in even worse situations before Sogeti so we thought, why not give it a try. And the way he described it to me was, your "standard [scummy] consulting company." That is red flag #1. After I got hired on, I then found out how misleading the benefits were. The 401k has an incredibly high match rate but also doesn't vest until you have been with the company for 3 years! Their education/tuition reimbursement keeps you on the hook for an entire year. Any education purchase you make (certification, course, etc) will be charged back to you unless you stay for an entire year following the date of the purchase. The company's attrition rate is so high, they try to shackle you with these golden handcuffs of the 401k and education reimbursement so they can keep profiting off you. Additionally, the bonus system is completely asinine. At the lower levels, you can get a bonus if your utilization (hours billed to client) is above 85%. But wait, they only give a bonus to the first 150 people above 85% AND the pool of people is all employees at the above levels across the entire United States, which is approximately 25,000 employees. When I asked a high-level manager what would happen if more than 150 people met the requirement, his exact words to me were, "We still haven't worked out the details to that yet." This should be red flag #2. Third, you have no shot of getting a meaningful raise by being a good employee. A few months before I left, the high-level manager announced that raises for promotions will be between 1%-3%. Meanwhile, their criteria for a promotion is that you should not only be doing your job, you should also be doing the job of the promotion you want and show that you can handle that for approximately a year before getting the promotion. So, basically have double the responsibility for a measly 1-3% salary increase. And for you software people reading this, one of the metrics for advancing to the next level is to "sell" to the client you are working for. You will have little to no chance of being able to do this as you are in a scrum development team that doesn't talk to the business folks from the client who are "buying." Not to mention the fact that Sogeti has salespeople where all the sales talk traffics through them. Sogeti rewards mediocrity and blind loyalty, not skill and drive, while their promotion criteria are tailored to business/salespeople. Software employees are second-class employees to Sogeti. Red flag #3. On the team I joined, I found out that Sogeti branded the team as a unit that had worked together for years and got along well. The truth is that none of the people on the team had worked together prior to that. The more senior members all bickered with each other like children while the junior developers carried the application forward. There were constant arguments and it was mentally exhausting being in the same room as these people having to listen to the drama. The junior developers got together and went to upper management and told them what was going on. There were problems with all the senior members, however, we pointed out the one who was at the source of it all, the one who was stirring the pot. We come to find out that the manager of all the teams was hiding the problems from upper management. Once that got out, we finally saw some change in personnel. However, the one who we all said was pulling the strings to cause the conflict was kept on the team. Additionally, upper management claimed changing too many people out would make the client unhappy. The 3 people that were removed were people who actually contribute to the team and drive business value. The one who gets to stay doesn't do any development work, doesn't contribute to the team in any way, and doesn't bring value to the client. That just doesn't make sense. Others before me left seeing how ineffective and self-preserving Sogeti was. Only 2 of the original 8 team members stayed on the team past 1.5 years. Sogeti just lies to their clients to protect their own image and don't care about their own personnel. Red flag #4. Do yourself a favor and never give this company a second thought. The benefits they tout are nothing but devices to try to keep you shackled below market value and make you second guess yourself from leaving to find a better company (i.e. "If I just deal with the BS for 2 more years..."). The 401k isn't worth it, the education expenses aren't worth it, no amount of money is worth this company. You will never get a meaningful raise unless you threaten to quit. And if you're at the point of threatening to quit, will you really be happy staying any longer?

2.0
30 May 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

They pay for your education and certifications. They pay for a tmobile plan. They separate their work into five different "practices" for you to choose. Our director gave me some good guidance.

Cons

I was a college hire and sat on the bench for 4 months with no work before I decided it was time to call it quits and find a better job. Sogeti sees college hires as cheap risks because sometimes they can make a fortune off of entry level professionals for 60-70k per year when they're getting billed at $100/hr. Our first two weeks of "training" consisted of watching powerpoints from mostly unenthused Sogeti consultants for 8 hours a day in Ohio. They covered topics like Java, cloud computing, DevOps, etc. These are awesome things to learn, but it's not a way to actually teach anything. People were literally falling asleep. Bench time sucks. You're not allowed to work from home unless you give them "satisfiable" reasons like appointments and emergencies. One week my car broke down and I ended up having to spend $200+ in ubers just to show up and do nothing. While on the bench, you're required to go to your unit office from 9-4:30 every day and sit in a conference room. Most other consulting companies understand that this is a waste of your time and will let you stay at home until they find you a project. They pride themselves to be a consulting company, but it's not always the case. In many instances it isn't different than contracting. At least half of their consultants have been on projects for 3+ years that it gets to a point where they really aren't consulting anymore, they're contracting. You have skills and expertise, but you aren't put on projects to share that knowledge. You go on a project because the client is shorthanded. Sogeti pushes consultants towards work unsuitable for their career. As a software developer, I was asked to maintain a government project that had an 18 year old, vb.NET error-filled and buggy application that only works on IE browsers. For 2 years. I said that this does nothing to further my career and rejected it. They gave me the whole rundown on how consultants need to accept anything they're given and how bad experiences can be learned from. They let me sit on the bench a while longer. It proved to me that money is more important to them than their employees. Raises are bad. I talked to a sr consultant and he said that he gets 1-2k raises each year. He had been working there for 5 years and wasn't surprised that newly hired sr consultants were earning more than him. The bonus system is strange. The top 30% of consultants earn $500-2000 monthly bonuses for doing things like satisfying clients, going to company meetings, and earning further education. There is no culture at Sogeti. Nobody seems to care or have any enthusiasm for what they do. They see it as a job that pays the bills. Which is fine for many people, but not for me.

1.0
20 July 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

401k match, decent benefits. Opportunity to get experience working with Fortune 500 clients. Possible work from home opportunity (depending on client/project). Overall decent place for college hires to gain the valuable experience that will land them their next job.

Cons

Non-compete agreement. Carefully hidden and strategically worded in the offer letter, is a very restrictive non-compete agreement. While I understand why companies do this; Sogeti (compared to other consulting firms in the area) stands out as being especially restrictive and inflexible in this area. By signing this deal with the devil, you give up all rights to pursue any opportunities with any client that you have had any direct exposure to during your tenure with Sogeti, for two years following your termination. So if you have dreams of working for any of the top Fortune 500 companies in your area; keep this in mind when agreeing to a new project. Lack of opportunity for advancement. Promotions/raises are only available once a year in January and are quite difficult to obtain. To be considered, you are required to make a case for yourself in the form of a few bullet points in an email. The process is 100% subjective, and the decision is entirely up to your GVP (aka someone who is too high up to know who you are, what you do, or what your value is). Promotion to a higher title is essentially meaningless; as a billable Consultant your duties/responsibilities will be unaffected as they are instead entirely determined by the needs of your client/project. Hard work with long hours for your client goes unnoticed, while what you do for Sogeti (aka Sales) is rewarded. Below market average compensation. Sogeti is simply unable to pay market value for its talent, especially over time. For this reason it is absolutely crucial to negotiate a reasonable salary at hire time. The ongoing cycle is to hire kids fresh out of college for next to nothing, then keep them until they can no longer afford them (usually 1-2 years). After 1-2 years of experience working with the latest tech stacks for Fortune 500 companies, Consultants leaving Sogeti can expect dramatic increases in salary. On the bench (ATO) time. While on the bench, you are expected to report to the office 8-4 Mon-Fri to sit and wait for a project. During this time, work from home is unacceptable even in case of sickness, emergency or inclement weather. This can go on for days, weeks or possibly months. There is no set time, but if on the bench for too long - you will be laid off. When a project is presented to you, it is generally not considered optional; even if the role is not a good fit with your skillset. The unspoken expectation is you remain flexible and be willing to take on any project presented to you. Flawed bonus system. Just like promotions/raises, bonuses are 100% subjective. Bonuses are awarded monthly, and paid out annually. Zero visibility on who bonuses are awarded to, or if they are even being awarded at all. Also like promotions/raises, what you can do for Sogeti (aka Sales) is rewarded while the hard work with long hours for your client will go unnoticed. The potential for achieving the max bonus of $24k/year advertised is completely unattainable. Unless entering a sales role; you should go in with the expectation of not receiving bonuses. Unethical practices from management. Management advising and helping to temporarily hide non-compliant behavior/items in order to occasional pass client audits. Management forcing Consultants to exaggerate or flat out lie about skills/background advertised in order to make a sale to clients. I have overheard several conversations including dialog from management such as "On your profile, I need you to make it SOUND like you have experience with X technology..." Morale and office culture. Over the past couple of years, the office has taken a dive in morale. Going from not having enough open desks, to now being a empty and quiet cubicle wasteland. The office has very dated furniture and facilities. Very good chances you have a broken chair. Peripherals such as monitors, mice and keyboards are simply not provided; you are expected to bring your own. Overall, its not a happy feeling in the office. When talking to other Consultants, you will find that most everyone is at least passively seeking new opportunities. Nobody seems happy to be working at Sogeti any more.

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