It's Ok, but there are better places - Senior Software Developer DTCC Employee Review

3.0
May 7, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Job security - Pretty much, as long as you show up, you'll still have your job.

Cons

When I started working there, we were able to walk across the street and eat at Metlife cafeteria which served mediocre food. After a couple years, we were no longer allowed to eat at Metlife which presented an issue because a significant amount of the approximately 1000 employees in the Tampa office went there for coffee, breakfast, and lunch. There is not sufficient eating space to provide seating and tables for a quarter of the office. They are using an outdated technology stack. When I joined in 2016, they were just transitioning to Git for version control which had already been a standard for years. They were also beginning to utilize the Agile methodology for their projects. They provide continual training for this new approach to project management, but there is often pushback and a preference for the waterfall way. Installation of software is to be performed by a separate team and a formal request has to be made. Oftentimes it takes days for this to be completed. They instituted an investment policy where you have to disclose your investment accounts. You have to provide your stock portfolio and you must use an approved broker (not Robinhood). You must hold a stock for at least 30 days before selling it. You have to provide monthly statements and pre-clear every stock you want to buy (approval is good for 3 days, then re-clearance must be established by calling compliance center). This policy is for all employees; regardless of access to sensitive data.

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5.0
May 17, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Very good work culture at dtcc

Cons

not many cons at dtcc

4.0
Jun 5, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Internal Audit's work is meaningful and provides strong exposure across risk, technology and operations. Audits tend to focus on areas that truly matter from a regulatory and risk perspective, so you're not just checking boxes. There is a genuinely strong team culture. Colleagues are competent, collaborative, and willing to help, with a good mix of experience levels that make it a solid environment for learning. There is also clear investment in employee development. Managers often have regular career discussions, and there are ongoing efforts around training, including newer areas like AI tools and capabilities. Recognition is present, and people are generally acknowledged for strong performance. Overall, it's a strong place to build audit fundamentals, gain exposure to innovation initiatives, and develop credibility within financial services / internal audit.

Cons

Internal Audit's workload is consistently high, not just during peak periods. It's common to juggle multiple audits with overlapping deadlines, alongside continuous monitoring and other responsibilities, which can make it difficult at times. Processes can be very documentation heavy and sometimes feel rigid, which is expected in a highly regulated environment but can reduce efficiency. A significant amount of time can go into formatting, reviewing and aligning work papers to methodology. Some workflows remain manual, which adds to the overall pressure and limit efficiency.

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