Guidehouse not "Same or Better": PwC Public Sector Spin-off Executed Poorly - Senior Associate Guidehouse Employee Review

2.0
Feb 25, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Flexibility (hours, work location, communication format) depending on project team - Opportunity for exposure to high-impact, mission-focused projects if aligned with right team/management - Opportunity to get actively involved in business development at early phase in career (whitepapers, proposals)

Cons

- Business appears to operate w/ same mentality of PwC brand, but with a Guidehouse brand that has no brand equity - Milestone rewards for Senior, Manager promotions were effectively removed - Compensation for existing employees materially disparate from market value - Disconnect between what senior mgmt. discusses during all-hands meetings vs. reality of the business - No campus recruiting presence, heavy reliance on headhunter orgs and referrals - Brand new / buggy IT systems create burden when delivering on client work - Unclear communication of Guidehouse business processes that changed as a result of spin-out - Aptitude of new hires is below that of talent recruited w/ PwC - No performance review system -- we create career goals for the year, but no mechanisms implemented to enable period or real-time feedback of my actual day-to-day work - No in-house trainings available - New initiatives at the firm show promise, but everyone is overwhelmed with oversubscription to client work - Folks who were with PwC and endured the transition --- many are leaving

Explore other reviews about Guidehouse

5.0
Jun 10, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

fantastic company to work for

Cons

educational opportunities were hard to find and fund

2.0
Jun 13, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I work directly with excellent people. My immediate colleagues are collaborative, capable, and committed to doing high-quality work for clients.

Cons

The biggest challenges tend to come from the corporate side of the organization. Corporate processes and communication can sometimes feel disconnected from the needs of project teams, which creates unnecessary friction. In addition, benefits that were once stronger, including 401(k) matching and medical coverage, have been significantly reduced. A recent example is the increased emphasis on “utilization rates” in merit increases. While utilization is understandable in a consulting environment, tying it too heavily to merit can effectively penalize employees for using earned vacation time and can make PTO feel less like a real benefit.

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