How can 2 good companies become one big failure? - Senior Technical Consultant Ellucian Employee Review

1.0
Mar 21, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Our paychecks are not bouncing! These two companies (SGHE and Datatel) used to be great companies to work for, now the combined company is bottom of the barrel.

Cons

Awful morale, employees are being used and abused, salaries are frozen, benefits are being eroded, expected bonuses are not being paid out. Travelling consultants are being nickeled and dimed to death. Management claims to be investing in employee education, but that is only lip service. Good people are being laid off, better people are resigning on their own.

Explore other reviews about Ellucian

5.0
May 11, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Work-life balance is amazing, great team to work with. Lots of opportunities to advance and learn new things

Cons

None. I've had an amazing experience working for Ellucian!

1
2.0
Jun 16, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

My immediate team was talented, dedicated, and genuinely committed to serving customers. I had the opportunity to work alongside smart, hardworking people who cared about doing the right thing and supporting one another through constant change. My direct leader was supportive, trusted their team, and provided the autonomy needed to make decisions and drive results. The best part of my experience at Ellucian was the people I worked with every day.

Cons

Ellucian has become heavily focused on protecting short‑term financial metrics, and it shows across the organization. Leadership’s constant emphasis on margins and EBITDA almost always results in the same outcome: layoffs and cost cutting instead of meaningful investment in people, products, or customers. The company is extremely siloed, which slows execution and makes collaboration difficult. Despite strong messaging about modernization and AI, internal systems and processes feel outdated and inefficient for a technology company. Transparency around major initiatives is limited. Major product and strategy announcements are made without giving employees the information needed to execute. Teams are often left without clarity on migration plans, customer impact, or operational readiness. Frequent same‑day layoffs have created instability for both employees and clients. Some customers have lost entire project teams overnight, and the repeated reductions have driven out top performers and subject matter experts. This has created knowledge gaps and inconsistent delivery. The impact is clear: more escalations, more unhappy clients, more accounts at risk, and more projects being handed to people who are not set up to succeed. These reductions have also created a culture of fear. Employees are hesitant to speak up, challenge decisions, or take risks because they do not know if they will be next. Trust is low, morale is low, and teams operate in a defensive posture rather than focusing on progress or innovation. The most significant issue is the short‑sighted approach to investment. Protecting quarterly numbers has taken priority over building a stable workforce, improving the customer experience, or strengthening the product. It may look good in the short term, but it is damaging long‑term competitiveness and driving away both talent and customers. Until the company balances financial discipline with real strategic investment and rebuilds trust with employees and clients, the same problems will continue to repeat.

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