Graduate Analyst - Graduate Analyst Cognizant Employee Review

3.0
Mar 19, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- good medical and insurance benefits - nice pantry at HQ - project opportunities in different industries, especially fintech - a stepping stone in the tech industry - that is if you manage to get into a good project (rare) without benching for too long

Cons

Fresh grads who wish to join Cognizant, please set your expectations right before you join. - Company culture depends on the projects you're allocated. Mostly Indian culture - Classroom training is VERY basic - meant for those with little to no knowledge in programming - E-learnings are mandatory, come with very strong accents. - Bonuses are bare minimal (less than 0.5 months) even with an excellent appraisal - Expect to be thrown into random projects and roles that you did not sign up for as project allocation is 'based on business requirement' - When you do not fit into 'business requirement', be ready to hot desk in the office (aka benched) for a long time - When they assigned you to projects, there are possibilities that you may not be doing what your role should be responsible for (Eg. BA may be doing QE. Dev may be doing BA/RPA) - Sad to say but the grad program is different from others. If you are academically trained in CS or well versed in tech, you can do better at other banks' grad programs that give more attention to their graduates.

Explore other reviews about Cognizant

5.0
Apr 5, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good and the bedt onr

Cons

No cons that i can think of

3.0
Jun 17, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Cognizant can be a great place to work at. You have to be self-motivated and driven. You won't often be given a script on how to do your job well. But if you are willing to search for new opportunities, you will find success.

Cons

Just like many other tech companies, layoffs are happening all the time. This often brings many projects to a complete halt. Management never communicates when someone is laid off. And when they are laid off, they often never back fill positions, leaving existing team members working the equivalent of three jobs at once. Most teams there are skeleton crews, ensuring that they cannot reach their full potential.

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