Proceed with Caution - Anonymous employee Slalom Employee Review

1.0
May 2, 2019
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

There are some really smart, great people that work at Slalom. The offices are all mostly all updated, cool spaces with the typical downtown amenities (snacks, drinks, lounge areas, etc). Some of the projects Slalom does are interesting, forward-thinking and exciting in cutting edge areas of technology. The corporate executive teams are accessible for the most part and ask for feedback (if it’s actioned or not is a different story). Slalom has a separate business unit called Slalom Build which is essentially a super innovative development lab that employs some of the brightest minds around.

Cons

All Slalom offices have a local model and operate autonomously so you can’t compare satisfaction office to office. Very few processes are streamlined or defined and as large of a company as Slalom is, there is very much a start-up vibe in a many of their offices. Slalom does a lot more staff augmentation work than they would lead on. As a consultant it’s hit or miss if you get on a project that is what you want to do or are interested in. Some of the perks for consultants (mileage/parking reimbursement) are sub-par compared to larger firms. Utilization is super high so lots of times it’s hard for Slalom to take on new projects. Sometimes projects that aren’t ‘interesting’ get ignored for projects that are deemed more ‘strategic.’ The majority of Slalom’s resources go to their larger clients. There isn’t necessarily anything wrong with that but it makes it hard to grow the business as aggressively as they would like. Another problem with high utilization is it makes it almost impossible to align the right resources to the right projects. There is a significant amount of professional ambiguity at Slalom. Decisions are made in a vacuum and there is very little transparency between leadership and employees. This leads to low morale in the office, among other problems. Lots of times expectations are vague or non-existent and that can lead to a volatile work environment. Slalom is a very much consulting organization NOT a sales led organization. The sales team has a very small seat at a very big table and little to no voice or support internally. Slalom does millions of dollars of work without ever engaging the sales team. Again, not necessarily a problem but Slalom has aggressive growth targets and you can’t preach growth without aligning resources and leadership that support sales. I agree with the reviewer who said “Slalom’s value proposition decreases dramatically over time.” (There is a strong movement internally to have employees complete reviews which can skew ratings.)

avatar
Slalom Response
6y
This is John Tobin. I try to be as transparent as possible as I can whenever I interact with anyone in the company and while we have levels at Slalom, I believe most don't look at us as hierarchical. That said, we definitely are focused on driving more outcomes for our clients, so your feedback on sometimes having too tactical of projects is something we constantly are addressing. If you’d like to share more feedback anonymously, please consider doing so via this survey: http://slalom.ws/anonsurvey.

Explore other reviews about Slalom

5.0
May 18, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Strong local client base, collaborative team culture, good learning opportunities, and career growth.

Cons

Need to adjust quickly to different clients, tools, and expectations.

2.0
Jun 11, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

•There is an impressive budget, especially for high-level events, ancillary experiences, client giveaways, and premium swag. Management does not hesitate to fund top-notch brand experiences when needed. •The company offers a highly competitive benefits and perks package that remains a strong selling point.

Cons

•The "fiercely human" core value does not match daily operations. Collaboration is routinely replaced by a self-service model of training videos and help articles. •These recurring shifts are designed to manufacture the appearance of fiscal stability for the benefit of external stakeholders and clients, while leaving core operational deficits unaddressed. •Organizational maturity is low. Teams operate in deep silos, the internal tech stack is outdated, and there is a distinct lack of adequate project and event management software.

2
See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All