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California State Auditor

Engaged employer

Toxic Work Culture - Auditor Evaluator California State Auditor Employee Review

2.0
Dec 26, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The Auditor's Office offers challenging and diverse work assignments for audit staff, great benefits, and a highly valuable work experience. Audit assignments generally last six to nine months, and staff are then assigned to new audit topics with new supervisors and new audit teams. This arrangement enables audit staff members to work on a range of high-profile policy issues and gain a wide breadth of experience.

Cons

The office has a highly toxic culture perpetuated by upper management. Management has a single-minded focus on publishing hard-hitting audit reports that are hyper-critical of the departments and programs being audited. Audit teams face extreme pressure to uncover hard-hitting findings, and this pressure results in a highly negative, fear-based work environment. Audit principals and supervisors are often fearful of taking responsibility for audit mishaps, and instead assign blame to staff members in overly critical performance reviews. The pressure to identify hard-hitting findings also drives audit teams to work extreme amounts of overtime, sometimes for months on end. Although the office has implemented a new training program, supervisors often do not adequately guide or train staff members. Many supervisors are rude and indifferent to staff, and only reprimand staff for doing something wrong after the fact. Most members of management (including upper management) do not care about cultivating or developing staff; instead, they see staff as replaceable cogs in a machine. As a result, turnover is incredibly high among audit staff. The office has cycled through literally hundreds of audit staff over the years, and it is unusual for staff to last more than 2-3 years before quitting. Upper management also retaliates swiftly against those who speak out against its practices or defy their rules. Although several members of upper management like to cultivate new staff for the sake of gaining loyalty, they will quickly reject anyone who raise concerns relating to staff turnover or office governance. In addition, staff have been harshly punished for defying basic office protocol; for example, one staff member was fired for adding her gender pronouns to her standardized email signature plate. If you want to succeed as an auditor here, you need to work hard, and only speak up if you have an audit finding. Do not speak out against management, at least until management changes. If you can handle a couple of years working here, I would recommend securing some good references and then get out. The work experience will speak well for you, but your sanity and well-being are not worth staying here for the long term.

Explore other reviews about California State Auditor

5.0
Mar 27, 2022
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Smart capable people, challenging and rewarding work, flexible telework options, amazing benefits and great starting salary for entry level auditors. Easy parking and a really nice building with a free gym and lots of natural light from large windows.

Cons

Office is very quiet now that most people are permanently teleworking, so for people who prefer working on-site, it is pretty empty. Auditors are under a lot of pressure and have to work some overtime.

4
3.0
May 19, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Fairly good work life balance - Remote work - No “cliqueness” culture or pressure to socialize - Very smart, professional, and cool colleagues

Cons

- Disorganized - Not clear on what I’m supposed to be doing all the time - Experience really depends on your team lead - Work can feel tedious - Feels like there’s a high-pressure, top-down mentality where the goal is to please or avoid being attacked

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