Company Needs to Make Serious Changes - Project Engineer ERM Employee Review

1.0
16 Oct 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I worked for ERM for 4.5 years. I was able to work on a variety of projects and learn a lot about various industries during that time. There were opportunities for travel if wanted, though after a while the extended travel began to wear on my family life. Most of the people in the local office were friendly.

Cons

There is a strong push for 100% billability. Managing Partners have voiced the opinion that individuals that cannot be fully billable should be fired. However, the additional job duties that are not billable functions do not get compensated through overtime pay. You are consistently asked to work 50+ hours/week but paid at a much lower rate than others in the industry for less work. Additionally, they try to lure you in with promises of an amazing bonus system. RUN! They promise that those who do great work will see 5-10% year end bonuses and are eligible for quarterly $2500 bonuses. These don't happen. At most you see 2% annual bonuses and you might (if a partner nominates you) receive a $500 quarterly bonus once. The additional effort put into the work is not equally compensated. Finally, ERM consistently bills out work at rates around 5 to 7 times higher than what the employees are actually paid. The private equity firm and the partners are then seeing the profits that come from this additional cash inflow, not the employees that are working the hours to complete the work.

Explore other reviews about ERM

5.0
7 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

welcoming work environment and engaging

Cons

I don't have any cons

2.0
8 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Interesting projects, flexible work hours, ability to pivot to new disciplines and teams

Cons

Employees are getting squeezed by increasingly difficult metrics, with less compensation, less work won because rates are now set so high. Less and less investment in employees through benefits and upskilling. Managers are spread so thin they can’t give time to their team.

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