Professionalism, passion and dedication - IT Consultant Triad Group Employee Review

5.0
Sep 2, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

One of my best employers so far I highly doubt I will be moving from Triad anytime soon and that is a testament to the culture and most importantly people that make up Triad Group Plc some having served well over 25 years (that says a lot about the fit and the features of working at Triad). I have been here almost a year and cannot fault it from the amazing support and team spirit of everyone I work with to the challenging client projects no one day is the same. You read clichés about companies but Triad is Agile in its approach and attitude and doesn't need to shout very loudly about this fact and its evident working at Triad the hierarchy is open (not vertical or flat) meaning I can approach the MD and have a casual conversation or discuss some new technology on our company portal feed. I have found at Triad I was encouraged to learn and cultivate my desire for more knowledge and understanding of technology and this was promoted by our CTO no less who understands investment in the people is the key to success (and their learning benefits the many varied clients as well as Triad itself). Salary package is above average and Triad Group understand to attract talent they can't be shy here however the interview process is quite tough for good reason but this ensures Triad Group hire the best talent out there from graduates to senior consultants and beyond. I look forward to long and prosperous career at Triad Group!

Cons

No con's to report as strange as it seems only thing I would say to prospective engineers is to brush up on your skills our interview process is quite tough but for good reason.

Explore other reviews about Triad Group

3.0
May 7, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

It's a medium-sized company with easy access to the MD. It's a consulting firm, so business is primarily dependent on the client base.

Cons

Very slow career progression and very selective.

2.0
Feb 5, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Flat organisational structure that gives consultants visibility and access to senior leadership, including an open and transparent CEO. Exposure to complex, high-impact public sector / cross-government programmes. Autonomy and responsibility from day one, allowing experienced consultants to operate at pace and take ownership of their work. Client-facing experience with senior stakeholders, offering strong learning opportunities in complex delivery environments. Trust-based culture in pockets, where good work is recognised by clients and delivery partners even when internal processes lag behind.

Cons

There is also a lack of regular, structured performance reviews during probation, and feedback is not always provided in a timely, balanced, or evidence-based way. Not working optimally with or feeling undermined by—a single colleague should not, in itself, equate to dismissal, particularly in an environment where there is no clear parity in ways of working across roles and disciplines. This dynamic can unintentionally create “demi-god” status for certain individuals, where subjective opinion outweighs objective delivery outcomes. It is possible to deliver strong work, contribute consistently to the programme, and maintain positive working relationships with the wider client and delivery teams, yet be informed very close to the end of a six-month probation period—sometimes just days before—that you have not passed. This can occur without clear, documented concerns, agreed improvement actions, or transparent evidence, and in some cases based primarily on the opinion of a single colleague (e.g a Principle UX lead undermining BA output). This approach can come as a significant shock and feels misaligned with a fair, supportive performance culture. More upfront performance management, regular check-ins, and structured feedback, particularly during probation, would give individuals the opportunity to address issues early, understand expectations, and succeed, while also supporting Triad in making more consistent and defensible decisions. Otherwise you end up with colleagues who are just echo chambers and you lose diversity of thought - which is crucial to innovation! I've seen this happen a few times and it's uncomfortable to witness.

2
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