Work life balance HELL!!!! - Finance Manager AIG Employee Review

1.0
Apr 16, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Not much good can be said about the company, if you are in a group where your opinions are valued, you might get some experience out of it. Early car service at 8pm.

Cons

Sweatshop environment, work hours in the finance community is usually till midnight on quarter ends and 8 or 9 normally and weekend work including major holidays (so goodbye july 4th bbq). Extremely old fashion culture where usage of new technology was faced with much resistant (think printing calculator instead of MS Excel). This caused very slow production cycles and bottlenecks for everyone and those who were efficient now seemed they don't have enough work. Male dominated senior management where women managers seem to have to stay extra late and work extra hard to just get invited to the party, very unprofessional behavior can be seen coming from senior male management. Horrible review system, one is rated against others in the same pay grade but not necessary the same function. Managers who have never spoken or worked with you gets to vote if you are an above average performer, so if your manager is outspoken and willing to fight for you against other managers, you get a better rating and thus a merit award. However, will s/he willing to hurt a relationship with another manager?

Explore other reviews about AIG

5.0
May 13, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good vibe and work life balance

Cons

slow and outdated tech stack

2.0
May 28, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Salary and vacation days are good but be careful you are not taking on multiple roles for this position.

Cons

If you’re considering applying, make sure to ask in the interview: Will there be someone else doing what I am doing? If not, the team is understaffed and all the responsibility will rest on your shoulders. Even with the vacation days, your days will be swamped and stressful. It is NOT worth it. Out of curiosity, I’ve been looking at their latest job postings for my department and there is so much packed into one role, it’s wild. You can tell the person they’re trying to replace clearly wore too many hats and it will be a long struggle to fill this position. Are my team members working in other time zones? You can face several early morning calls based on their hiring pattern. Some teams will require annual or quarterly traveling. Over the years, the company is hiring mainly white managers domestically in the USA, while lower roles are hired abroad or contractors. Meetings to accomodate offshore hours are brutal. What percentage of the day is in meetings? If you don’t have time to deliver on output because of meetings, you will likely have to stay late to complete the work. The company seems to hire very good talkers but not a lot of do-ers. Several meetings involved more people than needed. Managers seem to think “if I have to suffer through this meeting, everyone has to suffer”. If managers are fortunate enough to delegate the deliverables, they can handle some meetings by themselves. Who would be handling my onboarding and training when I start? If it is not your direct manager, your early success will be at the mercy of your peers who understandably are not responsible for onboarding you. Sadly, I have observed that the people-managers do not like to manage people. In fact, they value those that manage the manager and the team’s roadmap plan for them. The managers don’t seem to want to oversee the team or their deliverables. If there is a job change (salary, position, hours) how is that communicated? In my experience these things were not communicated or consented to. The change would apply in the system and you would have to conform accordingly.

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