Transparent Leadership and Competitive Compensation and Benefits - Senior Actuarial Associate Prudential Employee Review

5.0
Oct 22, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Benefits are generous compared to other places I’ve worked. Heavily subsidized insurance (health and supplemental), $1,600 per annum wellness benefit, $400-$800 per annum company HSA contribution, 10% target bonus (accurate), 100% match up to 4% 401k, employee stock program offering a 15% discount on lowest offer-period price (4 offering periods per annum, contributions up to 10% of salary), pension, and Rover coupons if you don’t have kids and can’t use the caregiver benefit. Leadership has also been transparent about ongoing layoffs which has been refreshing and there is much less (much much less) self-fellating by the executive team than I’ve seen at other companies.

Cons

Work environment and culture are heavily team-dependent so your mileage may vary. Communication across teams is not the best.

Explore other reviews about Prudential

5.0
May 21, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Work life balance and room for growth

Cons

Only been with company for 1 year, no cons as of yet.

1
1.0
Jun 16, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

They take you to lunch on your first day. Hybrid 2 days in the office, but I'm sure that will increase. The benefits & pay.

Cons

No training at all. You learn by failed case work and what other coworkers tell you. They expect you to do case work you have never processed before. If you fail too many cases, they put it against you and say your quality is bad. Train normally and the quality wouldn't be bad. If you continue to do "bad", they will just put you on phone calls every day to help rude and mean old people. Upwards of 40+ calls daily. They also don't put everyone on phones even though they say being on phones is an essential part of the job. They pick and choose their favorites to do casework and put everyone else on phones daily. Managers are useless and just sit in meetings all day and don't offer help, training, or guidance. Managers also provide snobby remarks when asking for clarification or help and answer back as if you are the dumbest person in the room and act as if you should already know the answer.

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