Pros
EY supported my CPA exams, and supported an amazing internship opportunity abroad. I also got some exposure to various industries and learned about different areas within tax.
Cons
There is too much emphasis and pressure on staff to have crazy utilization. Utilization is not controllable by a staff. No matter what they tell you. The schedulers, managers, and seniors, are the only ones responsible for the work you do and the hours you work. There are clear inequities in that. In addition, the hierarchal structure is not representative with how other organizations are run. At EY there is a clear, intern, staff, senior, manager, senior manager, director, partner lineage. This type of structure makes work inefficient and slow. The salary at the staff level is in line with other big four and I suspect higher than other smaller accounting firms. However, after searching for various other roles, I can say with certainty that corporate accounting pays more and that finance and analyst roles pay more than that. Finally, the people I got the chance to work with were not quite as nice or as friendly or as genuine as I had previously hope for. There were times when I just felt helpless. 50/50 would be the breakout of nice to rude people at EY. Just for example, as I am leaving the firm I typed a 2 paragraph long email thanking every single person I worked with. The reply rate to that email was less than 20-25%. This type of behavior is emblematic of a company who is more focused on the work than they are on the people who they are working with. I often times didnt feel like anyone cared if I was struggling to find work, or struggling because I had too much work. Even my counselor and peer advisors would advocate on behalf of the firm and the aggressor, in cases when people were over working me or being blatantly disrespectful.