Great culture and varied work, poor communication and visibility from management affecting progression - Associate Consultant Quick Release Employee Review

3.0
Feb 27, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

• The culture is really great - a little less so in the consulting team (though more understandable due to more varied locations and project commitments) - the wider main business is excellent • Lots of variety of projects/clients/industries - this goes up and down a bit, sometimes there will be lots of short term projects with different outcomes and over different industries, and sometimes you can be on a long-term project - management try to be flexible with your preferences • Good pay for a boutique consultancy, more flexible than main business and salary bands reviewed much more regularly to stay competitive as the team grows • Steer of team is pretty good, and expanding headcount to keep in line with this

Cons

• It is possible to be able to develop and progress quickly, but this is largely down to the project/role you are on and how well liked you are. With good visibility from the CMT (consulting management team) in the right project, it is possible to develop and progress fast. However, you can easily be on a project with no management visibility in a more analyst based role, which can really work against you - management are obsessed with 'evidence' for progression/promotion and in a sandbox project without someone from the CMT to back you up with a first-hand account, this can be very difficult. • Communication from the CMT is generally very poor, which can be disastrous for development/progression. There is a lot of focus on development in the team and a lot set up by the CMT to support this i.e. bi-annual development reviews which will give you development goals, but the poor communication outside of these are not helpful when trying to action points of concern. Also, there have been multiple instances where people have not passed probation/had probation extended because the doubts/concerns were not properly communicated, or there was no opportunity provided to be able to gather enough 'evidence' required to work on those development goals (which is often acknowledged by management, but leads to extended probation anyway). Similarly, there have been instances where grievances have been made against members of the team without management having provided any communication or feedback that there was anything wrong in the first place. This can be particularly frustrating when there are other members of the team are clearly very well-liked by management due to good projects/visibility and get promoted outside of the bi-annual progression cycles. There are also supposedly very strict salary bands (which are published), with the opportunity for increases once a year or when promoted - these bands have changed recently and different members of the team were moved to the new minimum while others were not, to the point where new graduates would have been earning more than current long standing employees (there was semi-valid reasoning behind this in fairness, but coupled with the points above and exceptions to the rule, this gives off the strong impression of playing favourites and rewarding those liked by management and 'punishing' those that aren't). • Managers in the CMT are a mixed bag - there are one or two managers who clearly really care and make a lot of effort to support those under them, but I would say there are more than not who give off the impression that their priority is their own career/progression and do not provide adequate support - who you end up with as your line manager is entirely down to luck. This is not helped by the fact that a lot of managers are on 80% contracts (something which is not extended to the whole team - though for fair reasons), which is not organised properly so there are periods where several managers are away for long stretches of time. This plus manager tendency to prioritise project work means that cadences of line manager meetings can be very disrupted (which also does not couple well with the importance of having visibility in your project work). • Bottom line: This role can be highly rewarding with the right project, strong management visibility, and genuine support from your line manager. However, without these factors, it can feel stifling, with difficulty in advancement or recognition or validation for your work despite strong delivery. Progression is framed as something you need to ‘make happen’, but the reality is that luck plays a significant role—your project assignment, visibility, and level of managerial support can make or break your experience.

avatar
Quick Release Response
1y
Thank you for leaving us a very balanced review. I'm pleased to see that positive overall organisational culture, salary and the variety of interesting and diverse roles is something that you find valuable, and as a business we will strive always to deliver those things. Regarding progression, we have made changes in the wider business to make sure that progression is based more so on project performance as opposed to how well people perform in reviews or the ability of people's manager's to push for them. In terms of management ability and interest within the Consultancy team specifically, I have ensured that the Head of UK Consultancy is aware of this review in order that they can address any challenges within their management team. Dave Slawson, Associate Director

Explore other reviews about Quick Release

5.0
Feb 14, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Knowledge resources and mentorship opportunities are a great fit for candidates of diverse backgrounds. Excellent culture for advancement and finding right fit roles.

Cons

Less competitive pay scale compared to industry/client equivalent roles, as a trade off for some of the other total compensation or benefit aspects.

avatar
Quick Release Response
1y
Thank you for leaving us a 5 star review!! I'm delighted that you value our knowledge, learning and development tools and programs - accelerated career development for high-potential people is a key part of our strategy and talent philosophy. I'm also grateful that you called out our inclusivness and that people from diverse backgrounds can and will succeed at QR - we are a meritocratic organisation and if an individual works hard and embodies our company values then we will do our very best to help them succeed. I do recognise your comments on salary and that our other benefits perhaps outweigh base salary - it's something we are mindful of (particularly in America), and will bear that in mind going forward. Dave Slawson, Associate Director
2.0
Jan 26, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great training and education. The managers are generally helpful. If you get to try multiple projects, thats great.

Cons

They have cut benefits more and more. Managers are not trained enough. They will find any excuse to not promote you. Managers need to do better. They ask for feedback and nothing ever changes.

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All