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Overall employee rating

3.1
Based on 24 reviews
5
4
3
2
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Detail Ratings
Work life balance
3.0
Career Growth
3.0
Work flexibility
4.0
Job Security
4.0
Pay and benefits
3.0
Leadership
3.0
Company Culture
3.0
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Associate Consultant
2.9
16 April 2026
Okay Experience for Entry-Level Consulting
Pros: You get solid exposure to client work and learn industry terms like benefits administration. The training programs for new hires are decent, especially for someone just starting in human capital consulting. There are opportunities to network, especially in the Chicago office.
Cons: Career growth for consulting roles feels really slow sometimes. It's tough to move up unless you're super vocal. There's not always a clear path or mentor assigned to help you with your progression. Promotions are infrequent, and you can feel stuck.
Advice to Management: Management needs to really focus on clearer career paths for junior consultants. Assign dedicated mentors and provide more frequent check-ins on progression. Help people see what's next for them.
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Financial Analyst
3.1
4 April 2026
Career Path Isn't Always Clear Here
Pros: You definitely learn a lot, especially being exposed to different clients in the financial services industry. There's good access to training resources if you seek them out. The benefits package is pretty solid for a company this size.
Cons: Career growth for junior financial roles isn't always clear. It feels like you hit a wall after a certain point unless you're really aggressive. Promotion paths aren't well-defined, and sometimes opportunities are scarce in the New York City office.
Advice to Management: Improve transparency around career progression, especially for associate and analyst levels. Create clearer mentorship programs and pathways for internal movement within the consulting firm.
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Consultant
3.0
31 March 2026
Job security is project-dependent here
Pros: WTW is a well-established big corporate firm, which does give a sense of stability overall. As a Consultant, if you're consistently on billable projects, you don't really worry much. They do try to keep people staffed.
Cons: Job security here feels very tied to the project pipeline for individual consultants. If you're between compensation consulting projects, it can get a bit stressful. There's no real guarantee if work slows down.
Advice to Management: Focus on more transparent communication regarding the project pipeline and what happens during slower periods for consultants. Clearer pathways for internal mobility would also help reduce anxiety.
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Latest jobs from WTW

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HR Consultant
3.1
31 March 2026
Decent Benefits, Pay Could Be Better
Pros: The health insurance is really comprehensive for an HR Consultant here. There's a solid 401k match, which is a big plus in this corporate consulting environment. The WFH allowance was a nice touch, especially in the Chicago office during our hybrid setup.
Cons: Base salary growth is pretty slow; it's tough to get significant raises even with good performance. Bonuses for junior roles often feel pretty minimal, sometimes barely making a difference. Compared to other firms in the human capital industry, I felt a bit underpaid for my experience.
Advice to Management: Review salary bands for mid-level consultants; it's getting harder to attract and retain talent when pay isn't competitive with peer firms.
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HR Consultant
3.4
30 March 2026
Decent Work-Life Balance for a Consultant
Pros: I appreciate the hybrid work model; it really helps balance personal and professional life. As an HR Consultant, the exposure to varied projects is solid. They've got a pretty good benefits package too.
Cons: During peak project cycles, the hours can get pretty long, definitely pushing past 40-hour weeks. It's tough to set boundaries sometimes, especially when client demands are high. There's often pressure to take on more, which impacts evenings.
Advice to Management: Management should really emphasize and enforce work boundaries during busy periods to prevent burnout. More resources for HR consulting teams during peak times would also help.
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Benefits Consultant
3.3
23 March 2026
Okay Pay, But Really Good Benefits Package
Pros: The health benefits are really strong, can't deny that. As a Benefits Consultant, I appreciate the comprehensive package, including good dental and vision. It's a big plus compared to other large corporate firms.
Cons: Base pay feels a bit low for the industry, honestly. You really have to push for raises here, especially if you're not in a revenue-generating role. Raises don't keep up with inflation often.
Advice to Management: Review compensation bands regularly to stay competitive. Retaining good talent is tough when pay isn't market rate.
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HR Consultant
3.3
19 March 2026
Decent Flexibility for Corporate Life
Pros: As an HR Consultant, I definitely appreciated the hybrid model. Being able to work from home a couple days a week really helped cut down on my commute in Atlanta. It's a solid perk for big corporate environments.
Cons: The actual implementation of WFH days could vary a lot by team and manager. Sometimes I felt pretty tied to office hours, even on my remote days, which isn't ideal for a global consulting firm trying to embrace flexibility.
Advice to Management: Try to standardize the work-from-home policies more across all teams and empower managers to truly support flexible hours, not just flexible locations.
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HR Analyst
3.3
6 March 2026
Solid benefits, pay could use a bump
Pros: Seriously, the health insurance is good, and the 401k match is pretty solid too. I really appreciate the generous PTO, which helps make up for some of the pay issues and keeps my work-life balance from totally collapsing.
Cons: My base salary as an HR Analyst just felt low compared to other roles out there with similar experience. Annual raises aren't really enough to make a big difference, so it feels like you're stuck unless you get a promotion.
Advice to Management: Take a serious look at salary ranges for roles like HR Analyst, especially compared to what competitors are offering. It's tough to feel valued when the pay isn't quite there, even with good benefits.
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HR Consultant
3.4
3 March 2026
Okay culture for a big corporate place
Pros: The hybrid work model is a huge plus. It helps a lot with work-life balance for those in HR consulting roles. There's also good job security being with a large enterprise like this in the Chicago office.
Cons: The company culture can feel pretty bureaucratic. Change moves slowly, and sometimes it's hard to feel truly connected to the wider organization beyond your immediate team. Employee engagement could be better across the board.
Advice to Management: Focus more on genuine employee engagement initiatives that feel less corporate. Encourage more cross-departmental collaboration to break down some of the internal silos.
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Associate Consultant
3.1
2 March 2026
Culture is evolving, some good parts
Pros: I've learned a lot in HR consulting, working on diverse client projects. The teams I worked with in the New York City office were generally collaborative and smart, especially within my immediate group. There's a decent focus on professional development if you seek it out for consulting roles.
Cons: The company culture can feel a bit fragmented after all the mergers and changes; it's hard to get everyone on the same page. Decision-making for complex benefits advisory projects can be slow and bureaucratic, which sometimes slows down progress. The hybrid work model is okay, but team cohesion sometimes suffers.
Advice to Management: Try to unify the company culture across different legacy groups and make decision-making for large-scale HR consulting initiatives more agile. Empower teams more and reduce some of the internal politics.
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