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      Kimley-Horn

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      How are the career development opportunities at Kimley-Horn?

      Kimley-Horn reviews

      will reward you for working to the bone

      Planner
      Current employee
      Recommend
      CEO approval
      Business outlook

      Pros

      Good benefits and pay, lots of career growth opportunities for entry-level people, excellent retirement matching program, good for people who like to work a lot and be rewarded for that

      Cons

      very culty corporate culture, difficult to take time off without working overtime, expected to work 45-50 hours per week on average, profit-driven to the point that work quality is sometimes low, planning projects are advertisements for engineering services, inflexible hours and work environment, the target for billable hours is very high, often clients are sold on more experienced professionals but younger folks are actually doing the work

      1

      Great Culture, Exciting Work

      Anonymous employee
      Current employee
      Dallas, TX
      Recommend
      CEO approval
      Business outlook

      Pros

      FANTASTIC 401k plan and benefits, bonuses are impactful, great work culture, Promising career paths.

      Cons

      could have a better maternity/paternity leave

      2 years in at Kimley-Horn

      Transportation planner
      Current employee
      Austin, TX
      Recommend
      CEO approval
      Business outlook

      Pros

      The freedom to pursue different types of projects is great, along with the opportunities for career advancement. The company provides many benefits that other engineering firms do not, or they provide better benefits than competitors, such as retirement contribution, profit sharing, conference allowances, networking allowances, employee lunches, etc.

      Cons

      There isn't as much flexibility to work from home as I would like, although this environment has made me appreciate working in the office a lot more. Planners specifically don't get as much support as some other teams. Culture can vary greatly from office to office.

      2

      Not for me

      Civil analyst i (entry)
      Former employee
      Dallas, TX
      Recommend
      CEO approval
      Business outlook

      Pros

      Good compensation (assuming you only work 40 hours), good bonuses and benefits, lots of opportunities to grow/learn, POSTED work hours are 7:30-5:30 M-Th, 7:30-11:30 F

      Cons

      The company sets unrealistic deadlines and expects you to work past dinner (sometimes to 9 or 10) every night to meet them. I would leave on time (at 5:30) almost every day and because of this, my coworkers were bitter/ thought I was crazy lol. This is not somewhere to work if you value your life outside of work, but if you LOVE working and want to be there all the time, it would be a great environment and the people are friendly.

      4

      Kimley-Horn

      Civil engineer
      Current employee
      Fort Lauderdale, FL
      Recommend
      CEO approval
      Business outlook

      Pros

      You have a lot of opportunity for upward mobility in your early career.

      Cons

      You will be working long hours.

      Great Company, High Demands and High Reward

      Civil engineer manager
      Current employee
      Oakland, CA
      Recommend
      CEO approval
      Business outlook

      Pros

      Fast career growth opportunities, lots of resources and support, great mentors/people

      Cons

      It can be tough to keep up with the high demands of the job, which isn't surprising since it's trying to be a top firm that hires the best in the country.

      Get what You Pay For

      Anonymous employee
      Current employee
      Recommend
      CEO approval
      Business outlook

      Pros

      Really solid compensation, decent benefits, horizontal structure so career advancement is easy

      Cons

      43 hours a week minimum to meet goal, late nights past 6:30 are not uncommon even for senior staff, you never take your foot off the gas, firmwide skeptical of hybrid, no remote

      Burnout Culture

      Analyst
      Former employee
      Recommend
      CEO approval
      Business outlook

      Pros

      - Lots of training for new employees -Culture encourages teamwork over competition - Lots of opportunities for leadership at the start of your career - Rewards and supports employees for their hard work with EOY bonuses representative of effort and recognition awards at holiday parties and monthly meetings -Large diversity of projects to work on -Many talented coworkers willing to help you out (not just in your office, but nationwide) - Groups for women and minorities to join and find community - HR is very on top of onboarding and off boarding procedures. Very communicative and kind team, but I didn’t feel comfortable being honest about my experience until I put in my two weeks notice.

      Cons

      - Internship experience across multiple regions projects a dishonest “9 to 5” experience because of hourly billing (interns are discouraged to work overtime) - If you need work-life balance, this is not the place for you. Once your billing becomes salaried (full-time not intern), you are expected to prioritize your work over everything else (unless you have a medical emergency). Team workload meetings often projected hours into the 50-60+ hours/week, every week I worked there, for every employee on the team. Sometimes hours were even in the 70+ hours/week. - The office I worked in had about 150+ employees and I only saw about 5-10 employees taking a lunch break on a daily basis. The majority of people worked through lunch and ate at their desk. - The private break rooms were nice, but no one used them unless they were nursing and even those that were nursing would work in the rooms instead of taking a break. - I felt guilty for taking a mental break, because most of my coworkers would work 10-12+ hour days and not take any breaks (even for lunch). Sometimes our team would have fun, group conversations but it was only about 1x/day or every few days. - On my exit interview, Utilization Time was an option on the drop down as a reason for leaving. So many people have asked management for a change to their UT, and saw no change, that they had to leave the company. Because of the company’s high UT (utilization time) goal, employees are expected to spend a certain amount of total hours in a year working on billable (client projects). This does not include any team bonding meetings, efforts to improve team efficiency, or lunch breaks, because they cannot be billed directly to a client project. Therefore, many people are discouraged from spending much time, if at all, on team bonding during work hours, lunch, or improving team efficiency. We were given a lot of vacation, but if we were to use it, we’d have to work extra hard to meet our high UT goals. This is why most of our workloads projected individual hours into the 50-60+ hours/week. The UT goals were what they were because that is what employees needed to maintain the business’ financial health. It was a very profit over people environment, even though they did try to reward and recognize employees where they could. - Upper management / my more experienced coworkers often worked more hours than me. I would see them staying late into the evenings many nights or coming in very early every day. - Rigid start time of 7:30 AM, but no rigid end time, so technically you could work forever and that would be acceptable. -WFH is discouraged, even though every employee is given a laptop computer connected to the company server

      4

      Kimley-Horn Review

      Civil engineer
      Current employee
      Miami, FL
      Recommend
      CEO approval
      Business outlook

      Pros

      Good compensation and opportunities to excel in your career.

      Cons

      long hours are practically expected and it seems the longer your progress in your career it only gets worse.

      1

      Great Career Advancement but at a cost

      Anonymous employee
      Current employee
      Recommend
      CEO approval
      Business outlook

      Pros

      Younger employees are given a lot of responsibility early on which can be great for career growth and building technical skills. One year of working here really is like working 3 years somewhere else. You’ll learn that much. Benefits definitely feel like they’re the best in the industry especially the 401k match since they base the percentage on your total compensation (salary+bonus).

      Cons

      Really does matter which team you land on. Fortunately, I am on a great team but it varies among all the offices. Hours are long and definitely have to set boundaries otherwise you’ll burn out quick. Every year these insane goals are set and good luck if your office doesn’t hit any of them. That’s when things get ugly. You can already be short staffed but if your office isn’t doing great, people are “asked” to leave.

      5