Employee Review
- Current Employee★★★★★
great
Jan 27, 2023 - Manager in Nash, TNRecommendCEO ApprovalBusiness OutlookPros
Awesome place to work. y
Cons
good people and no cons.
Other Employee Reviews
- Current Employee, more than 1 year★★★★★
Great Culture, Great People, Great Product
Mar 20, 2023 - Product ManagerRecommendCEO ApprovalBusiness OutlookPros
- Culture - People - Fast Pace - Remote Work - Work/Life Balance - Benefits - New Ideas Are Welcome & Encouraged! - Unlimited Vacation Time - Lot's Of Extras For Both Remote & In-Office Workers
Cons
I have not noticed any cons that are unique to Forrester.
Continue reading - Former Employee, more than 10 years★★★★★
Retired after 24 years (at age 67) so clearly it was a great fit for me
Mar 15, 2023 - Research Director in Cambridge, MARecommendCEO ApprovalBusiness OutlookPros
The work: Fascinating, challenging, intellectually stimulating, and rewarding The people: Smart, hard-working, collegial, and often very creative High standards: Teams focus on getting the research and analysis right Integrity: A non-negotiable requirement for everyone in every job (whether vendors and competitors believe it or not :-) ) Salary and benefits: As a former manager I know that the company tried to do the right thing by employees in terms of total compensation: the salary, bonuses, restricted stock, healthcare, etc. , added up to something very livable -- and generally improved over time Career opportunities: You can work your way up job ladders and keep getting promotions and raises OR jump to a client, which I saw many analysts do over the years. The nature of the work will expose you to many opportunities and the reputation of the company is such that it's always good to have on your resume no matter where life takes you.
Cons
Work/life balance is something that you have to create for yourself or the job will eat your life; so, if you're not someone who can set and maintain boundaries, this might not be the right firm for you (I can and did so it was) Execution (and operational discipline in general) often lags behind vision and strategy, which creates frustration. This always seemed fixable to me so there's hope!
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