Great experience working for Squarcle - Senior Consultant Squarcle Employee Review

5.0
5 Mar 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Positive supportive culture, and true meritocracy. Good work is acknowledged and rewarded by senior management and there is an atmosphere of excitement as the company continues to expand. It is a really enjoyable working environment, in which I made several friends. You will get access to senior stakeholders and be given responsibility over important pieces of work. It exposes you to a much higher level of working than in the average SME Consultancy, meaning that you gain skills, both soft and technical, very quickly. As such, a job with Squarcle is best suited to those that would describe themselves as ‘self-starters’ and with initiative. I really enjoyed my time working with Squarcle, and only decided to leave due to geographical constraints.

Cons

Sometimes an issue with office capacity - although this is under review.

Explore other reviews about Squarcle

1.0
10 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

They have allowed remote work

Cons

They recruiting agency sent me a job desciption where I had to be only SC cleared and on the top of my CV said very big "EU Settled SC Cleared Architect" The company HR also saw this and once i joined, they had my SC transferred to them and then they said that I had to be British to work in the projects. They dismissed me 2 months after I joined and after my SC clearance was transferred to them. I never worked on any project.

2.0
28 Jan 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Ambitious growth, interesting clients, and a lot of smart, motivated people. When work is flowing, delivery pace is high and there is genuine scope to build capability. If the organisation stabilises and matures, it could become a strong place to work.

Cons

Despite presenting itself as progressive and broad-based, the organisation strongly favours ex-military white males in hiring, influence, and promotion. Decision-making is highly centralised and often driven by the CEO’s personal views rather than consistent strategy or evidence. Growth has outpaced foundations. When work is not won quickly enough, risk is effectively passed to employees through sudden role changes or exits, rather than absorbed by the business. There is a strong focus on profit maximisation, cost reduction, and optics around IP and software products, much of which feels overstated in practice. Training investment has reduced, workloads are often unsustainable, and delivery pressure is constant. There is a noticeable sense that the business is being positioned for sale, which shapes priorities in ways that do not always benefit staff or long-term capability.

4
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