If You’re Billable, You’re Fine. If Not, Good Luck. - IAM Consultant TriVir Employee Review

1.0
Dec 4, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Compensation is solid for the role Very flexible dress code / casual work environment

Cons

Job security depends entirely on whether you are billable to a client No real support or structure when a project ends or a client temporarily stops hours Minimal career development unless it directly benefits a contract You’re treated more like a resource than an employee Lack of internal leadership presence or direction Communication from management is inconsistent Company invests very little in employees who are “on the bench” Work-life balance varies wildly depending on the client you’re assigned to

Explore other reviews about TriVir

5.0
Jul 11, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Opportunity to learn a lot and take ownership of many different projects. Always learning something new.

Cons

No cons really, it’s a great place to work as an engineer. You need to understand that you’re in the business of selling hours of great work. To minimize the possibility of not succeeding, you need to be disciplined and on top of your performance across projects, as well as how your peers are liking working with you.

1.0
Oct 18, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Free snacks in the fridge and occasional “team-building” events to keep up appearances.

Cons

This company paints a perfect picture—almost cult-like—in getting you to believe that everything is going well, but suddenly, you’re out of a job. They’re great at highlighting the positives but conveniently omit the negatives. If you’re not billing to a client consistently, the writing is on the wall. The CEO’s greed drives every decision, and employees seem to worship him. The company runs solely on billable work, so if you’re not actively bringing in revenue, you’re expendable. They even have PS5s in their offices that are caked up with dust because employees are too afraid to take a break—they’re too focused on staying billable to avoid being the next to go.

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All