If you have a choice - pick another option! - Anonymous employee Capgemini Employee Review

1.0
Feb 28, 2024
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

They let you work remotely (the only reason I am still there)

Cons

Oh where do I start.... From my experience, your skills will not be appreciated here. It does not matter how good you are at what you are doing. Say, they hired you as an amazing cook with years of meaningful experience. However, if their client needs a mechanic, they will assign you a mandatory auto-repair training, force you to take it and start working fixing the client's cars. You don’t want to fix cars because you like cooking and you were hired to do exactly that? Welp, no bonus, no pay raise for you then. The organization is either a total mess or carefully planned system on how to pay people less. Remember that mandatory training I mentioned before? It will be scheduled for 4:30am of your time and you will be notified about it a day before it starts. You cannot make it? Welp, no bonus, no pay raise for you then. They will come up with mandatory learning hours that you need to complete within a year and will tell you about it 2 months until the year ends. Good luck cramming those 60-hour worth of online courses while working diligently on the client. What did you say? You have family and life outside work? Welp, you guessed it right, no bonus, no pay raise for you then. The management will talk to you only if they need anything from you, not the other way around. Make sure you apply for your well deserved PTO 6-8 months in advance, because that’s how long it will take you to finally get a reply from your manager after many-many-many messages, emails, calls bagging to approve your leave… Oh, and don’t even try to make vacation plans for all your deserved hours, because you will need them to accommodate the difference between the client holidays and Capgemini’s holidays. Yes, when the client has a holiday and Capgemini doesn’t have one, you are forced to take PTO. You might hear about their fair survey system to get feedback from employees or the platform that accepts complaints about mistreatment in the workplace. It does not work. The managers will treat you any way they want (and yes, I had to set boundaries more then once). They will take your complaint, mark it as resolved without any explanation, without letting you even know if something was done about it. Last year I constantly heard only positive feedback from the teams I worked with (clients), and got recognized in sprint reviews multiple times. Not to brag, but after more than a decade of experience in my field I got pretty damn good at what I do for a living. However, my year end rating is below average this year. Why? Managers don't say, all they say is that there are many people involved in the review and they cannot know exactly at what level I failed. Is it because I put my family first and didn't spend the last 2-3 months of the year cramming those online courses every evening instead of spending time with my kids? Is it because I didn’t want to switch from “cooking” to “fixing cars”? OR is it because the company is trying to save some money by not paying their people (people who make their profit) bonuses and not giving them pay raises? No way to know…but the main question is why work so hard if in the end I am below average. If you don’t have any other choice and you can close your eyes, breeze in, breeze out, and say “as long as I am getting paid at least something…” then this company is ok I guess 😀

Explore other reviews about Capgemini

5.0
Jun 25, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good inclusive culture , supportive community

Cons

You have to be proactive and show above and beyond quality

1.0
Jun 30, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

there are no pros for this company

Cons

I was laid off after spending several months on the bench, with "lack of available projects" cited as the reason. However, another consultant in the same role who was also without an active client engagement was retained. As a woman and racial minority, I could not ignore the disparity in how these decisions appeared to be made. Before my termination, I reported being recorded without my consent and raised concerns about conduct that I believed reflected implicit bias. I was referred to as "URM" instead of by my name or role, encouraged toward race based employee resource groups rather than meaningful career opportunities, and repeatedly advocated for fair project placement while on the bench. My employment ended shortly after I raised these concerns. Following my termination, I pursued the matter through the appropriate internal and legal channels. I provided documentation supporting my concerns and gave the company multiple opportunities to investigate and resolve the issues. Rather than meaningfully addressing the evidence or acknowledging the seriousness of the allegations, the company denied wrongdoing, offered what I viewed as a nominal severance, and declined to accept accountability. Employees deserve confidence that concerns about discrimination and retaliation will be investigated objectively and fairly. My experience left me with the opposite impression.

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