Good way to get your foot into IT careers, when it works - Anonymous employee FDM Group Employee Review

1.0
May 17, 2018
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great teachers, great way to get into the IT sector, good healthcare and benefits

Cons

About the training process, if you are from outside NY or Washington D.C., and cant really do a good commute, you'll be put in a hotel. FDM pays for the hotel, and you pay the taxes. I wasn't really ever sure how this works, but it ends up the FDM pays your hotel like they're paying you. So while you're only making 13.50 an hour, your being taxed a good 30% of your take home pay and the hotel costs $1000 a month, each room is $2000 for the two occupants (you will have a roommate). This is called a fringe benefit and some of my peers were really upset about this. If you have a family and bills to pay, although you'll get a good job later, you'll have a very difficult time while you're in training. The New York hotel is lacking in a lot of ways. 3 bathrooms per floor, so sharing them with 40 other people, and 1 kitchen per floor. No storage space to cook your own food. The D.C. hotel is a lot better, almost like a suite where you share one bathroom and kitchen with two rooms, and the hotel provides dinner a couple nights a week. If you are given a choice go with the DC office. About the structure, the account managers and the trainers/training staff seem to have really bad disconnect. Very little communication between the two about how someone is doing, and trying to get all the trainees jobs. Now, this is my experience and doesnt apply to most everyone who goes through the FDM Process. All of my classmates got positions, so this is from my experience. I went through the entire training at FDM, and had interviews with 3 different clients. This is an extremely low amount. No one was able to tell me why I was not getting interviews, not the account managers or the director of the north American training. I believe it boiled down to my degree, which is the main thing of this review: If you have a degree in Computer Science, Finance, Business, or similar fields, go for FDM if you want to get into the IT field easily. If you don't, I highly don't recommend it. My professors loved me, and always continued to wonder why I wasn't getting inteviews as my collegues were. I was given an award while in training, passed all of my classes, and never had a bad attendance. Yet I was hired in because of the way FDM promotes their recuiters to account managers (the recruiters become account managers after x amount of people are recruited), even though my background would not get me a position with one of their clients. There was also a problem with FDM treats their products (which is their consultants). They have tiers of people, and it goes like this: Females Veterans anybody else They pride themselves in promoting women in tech, yet they do so at the determent to everyone else. I had a female in my class who failed 4 classes, came to work pretty hung over on mondays, who regularly fell asleep in class, and came into work an hour late on several occasions. Yet aside from this she not only had more interviews than I, but was placed with a client. Had this been a male, they would have been fired. Yet because she was female, and they pride themselves in women in tech, she was given a job. I could go on about the descrepancies of how non-vet males are lower on the scale than vets or females.

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Pros

Will get opportunities to work with financial clients,

Cons

But only as a contractor.

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1.0
May 13, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

It is a job that pays.

Cons

They will promise you opportunities that don't exist. The company they contract you to will promise you work that you will not be assigned. I was a Java Consultant with a masters degree in Math and certificate in full stack and I was shoved into a manual testing position that required zero coding and constantly dangled automation in front of my face. When I was asked to look at Selenium, I studied it in some of the copious amounts of downtime i had and was reprimanded during the next meeting for 'wasting company time'. I moved from Texas to New Jersey for my first position. After contracts with the company were terminated, I was pulled off my assignment only to be abruptly fired for "lack of geoflexibility" despite willingness to move to several places they do business including NYC and even Denver. There is no accountability from them as the only response they give is "the decision is final". There is no way to appeal a blatant lie. Their company has no integrity and side with business majors over people that know how chemicals and physics and electrical components work just seem like bad life decisions. They will say you can reapply but they won't hire you. They'd full of it at every angle.

5
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