Great Culture, Not So Great Role - Research Manager, Client Solutions GLG Employee Review

3.0
15 Dec 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

For starters, GLG has a great culture. The people that I met and worked with were all very supportive (most of the time) and I truly felt like there was a camaraderie. Having started back in the beginning of 2021, they were in an all-remote setting (and continue to do so). Despite this, they had a very robust training program (which was still effective to partake in a remote/virtual setting). The benefits package was great overall, and having the unlimited PTO perk was a plus. The PTO experience may have varied from department / team, but for me, 99% of the time I was able to get the days off that I needed. Work life balance was also, for the most part, very good.

Cons

The biggest obstacle that I faced while working at GLG was the lack of client response / engagement on open projects. It amazes me how often clients would ghost me whenever I was in the middle of working on a project that they initially came to us for help with. Unfortunately, this ongoing cadence of client ghosting became almost a daily occurrence for me. When clients are unresponsive, leadership will push you to do immense (and I mean immense) outreach to try and follow up with those unresponsive clients. It got to the point where most of my day was spent either on the phone or writing multiple follow-up emails to get clients to respond to the work that I did for them. Many instances, these projects would end up being closed due to a lack of client response and the worst part about this was that all of the work that I did on those projects would not count towards my performance metrics. It was demoralizing, but leadership rarely took that into consideration. The worst part was, if you told leadership about these issues, they would always use the same excuse every time (“we’re client servicing, that’s just the nature of this job, control what you can control”, etc.) and would turn the other cheek. Despite this, I always tried to offer solutions on how we could improve this ongoing issue to better and strengthen the partnership (i.e. set up a meeting with the client sponsors to discuss best practices on how to best use GLG, etc.) However, leadership was (and still are) too scared to give clients any form of feedback on how they can be better partners to work with. I’ve never seen a company be so afraid to stand up for their own employees and the hard work that they continuously put out. After all, GLG always told us that this dynamic with clients is a partnership. A partnership takes effort from BOTH sides in order to succeed. If clients are constantly falling into a bad habit of ghosting / not communicating, that is not a recipe for success. Don’t be fooled. This is not a partnership or a true-blue consulting environment. It’s an over-glorified customer service role that’s incredibly one-sided (in terms of expectations). All of this ultimately led to a burnout, and I ended up leaving the company to pursue a better opportunity.

Explore other reviews about GLG

5.0
31 Mar 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Amazing people - lots of reviews say that because it's true. You'll work with smart, genuine, hard working humans. Good benefits and perks. Interesting events and opportunities to learn. Overall, a good place to start your career!

Cons

Very fast-paced environment which definitely isn't for everyone. Lots of necessary change.

1.0
14 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good colleagues, arguably a good job post college (for like a year MAX)

Cons

I cannot stress enough how terrible this company is. Spent 5 years there, and watched it go further downhill every year. You leave with only soft skills (if that), and 0 actual industry knowledge. Seriously, you leave only knowing a bunch of Hocus Pocus. I am really surprised this company hasn't been bought yet. Or merged. On my team alone, we lost 7 out of our 9 managers since January... either due to layoffs or them quitting. Pay is low. There are no bonuses and it's very difficult to get a raise. 90k in NYC is poverty. There are bright people that come in with Masters, and PhDs, and MBAs -- handing them 90k is insulting.

1
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