Consultant - Anonymous employee CGI Employee Review

3.0
6 Jul 2018
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great place to start out of college. Good management. Nice work/life balance.

Cons

Get your feet wet at CGI to get in the door at other firms. Very minimal pay increases and less lateral movement opportunities compared to other firms. Started at 57k out of college at CGI. Left 4 years later at 63k with "exceeds expectations" every year on my evals. High performer but didn't advance. I left CGI for a $15k raise at a larger firm, starting there at $78k and one step up (senior consultant). I left the larger firm 4 years later at $102k, as a manager, with similar work/life balance to CGI and average performance evals. 24k increase from first day to last day at the larger firm. 6k increase from first day to last day at CGI. Both a 4 year tenure.

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5.0
18 Jun 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Work life balance, growth, quality

Cons

Less pay compared to market

1.0
16 Jun 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

no specific positives to highlight from my perspective

Cons

I worked at CGI in both India and the USA and observed similar workplace culture concerns across both locations. The only real difference was HR—India HR felt more supportive, while my experience with USA HR was disappointing. My employment ended shortly after maternity leave due to an alleged “lack of projects,” which I experienced as a layoff. I also observed what appeared to be misuse of position by some leaders, including blurred professional boundaries, preferential treatment, and expectations that went beyond normal workplace roles—at times resembling personal-assistant-style demands rather than professional conduct. Surprisingly, I also noticed inconsistent “policies” applied differently to different individuals. In some cases, it felt like the rules changed depending on who you were. When leadership became aware that someone was related to another employee in the organization, it sometimes felt like that person was singled out or targeted rather than treated objectively. Overall, these practices—whether through inconsistent treatment, perceived power misuse, or favoritism—undermine trust, damage workplace culture, and raise serious concerns about fairness and professionalism.

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