It's a decent gig - Accounting Clerk NBCUniversal Employee Review

4.0
Jun 30, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Being an Accounting Clerk is a relatively easy job (in comparison with other more involved accounting positions). However, it is very mundane. It involves a lot of filing, sorting, copying, logging. You may also be required to get lunch for your department. There is a lot of opportunity for growth (if you stick with the same group of people from show to show) and most people are willing to show you how to work with the accounting software (most companies use EP Vista--not to be confused with the Microsoft OS). You get a pretty decent weekly rate, and, after logging in a certain number of hours at your position, you get health benefits! You get free lunch (at the expense of having no official lunch break). If you're considering a job that's a step up from the Production Assistant position and considering a career in Accounting, then this is a good entry-level spot for you.

Cons

Being an Accounting Clerk is usually on a contract/term basis. You can be employed as a clerk with the parent company of the movie for whom you are working, or you can just work with the studio from show to show. As a result, your job status is relatively unstable. The hours are long. Depending on who your head accountant is, you can work from 50+ to 60+ a week. As a result, your weekly rate that seems awesome in comparison with the 40+ a week work is pretty average when you break it down to actual hours worked. As mentioned above, you get no real lunch break because your meal is bought for you by the production. Also, once you stop working in Accounting, your health benefits stop after your qualifying period. It's a long and tedious job. You will be a lot busier than a Production Assistant (though you will be making only slightly more). You may start to wonder how other people got their jobs because you'll discover how much other departments make and realize that they're less than competent...

Explore other reviews about NBCUniversal

5.0
Jun 24, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good environment and location. Easy to assimilate

Cons

Expensive area and not a lot of growth potential

3.0
Jun 29, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

NBCUniversal is full of smart, funny, talented people who genuinely care about the work. I learned a tremendous amount there, especially about programming, production, audience strategy, brand management, budgets, talent, internal politics, and how a major media company actually functions when the glossy press release meets the spreadsheet. The brands are still powerful. NBC, Peacock, Bravo, USA, SYFY, E!, and the broader portfolio have real history, real audiences, and real cultural weight. When the company is aligned, it can move beautifully. You get exposure to major shows, high-level conversations, complex productions, and the kind of institutional knowledge you cannot really get anywhere smaller. It is also a place where you can build real taste and real judgment. You see what works, what almost works, what dies in a conference room, and what somehow survives three leadership changes and a budget cut.

Cons

The biggest downside is instability. NBCUniversal has been through major structural change, including the cable network spinoff into Versant, divestitures, reorganizations, and significant layoffs. That kind of uncertainty changes the job. You are not just doing the work. You are trying to understand which version of the company you work for this quarter. Decision-making can also be slow and heavily layered. There are a lot of smart people, but sometimes too many of them need to bless the same sentence, deck, cut, budget, or idea. The result is that good work can get sanded down, delayed, or rerouted through a maze wearing a lanyard. The company also asks people to do more with less, then less with less, then somehow make it feel premium. That is exhausting. Especially for employees who care deeply and are trying to protect the creative, the business, and their own sanity without being handed a map.

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All