employer cover photo
employer logo
employer logo

The Technology Partnership

Engaged employer

Great people and challenging projects, but alpha culture persists - Technical Consultant The Technology Partnership Employee Review

4.0
Apr 30, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Actual people doing the work are absolutely amazing (technicians, engineers, scientists) - Projects can be really technically challenging especially with budget and timeline in mind (phd level skill are actually used, from time to time) - Good pay and progression (in 2020-2023, not necessarily still present)

Cons

- The company is very much "alpha male" culture heavy. Not necessarily you need to be that race/gender to fit in, but if you are not in the power circle you are often on the bench or look out for projects to fill your timesheet.. - You are basically treated to be sink or swim. Almost zero support exists, your first weeks decides your entire journey at TTP. I did not get my best start and I was not really having enough projects to keep me entertained. - Everyone has to do BD- it is the gateway to lead more project, do more project or be paid more. If you are not a BD guy, selling something more intangible as well, you are going to struggle big time.

Explore other reviews about The Technology Partnership

5.0
May 10, 2022
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great company to work for

Cons

None come to my mind

2.0
Jun 2, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Mostly great co-workers - Interesting and challenging projects - Building and facilities

Cons

- The “flat structure” is often used as a justification to push more responsibility onto people without corresponding salary or recognition - Salary bands and pay rises are a complete black box, with opaque and often arbitrary decisions made by people who do not know the individual or their contribution - Tenure and time served matter more than performance when it comes to progression and pay - High performers are frequently not recognised or retained, while underperformance is tolerated or even rewarded in some cases - There is a noticeable culture of complacency in parts of the organisation - Some elements of culture feel old-school and overly hierarchical in practice, despite what is stated. Outdated attitude towards flexible working - Many (senior) managers lack basic people management skills - There is very little meaningful training or development on offer - Multi-million-pound payouts to former shareholders make it feel like employees are working to fund someone else's retirement rather than being fairly rewarded for creating value - Feedback on these issues is often dismissed with comments like “grass is greener elsewhere” rather than being addressed

3
See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All