Epsilon Reviews

3.7

69% would recommend to a friend

(3,335 total reviews)

Sean Reardon

61% approve of CEO

59% positive business outlook

Epsilon has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 3,335 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Epsilon employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Media and communication industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

3K reviews
1.0
18 Feb 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good infrastructure. Other than that can't think of any.

Cons

The Bangalore office is one of the most ill-manned offices of Epsilon. Here, you find managers who treat employees like slaves. Too much of micro management. Pathetic work culture with insane amount of pressure. No work-life balance. Extremely rude managers. Especially the one sitting on the 9th floor.

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Epsilon Response
10y
Thank you for taking the time to give us feedback. We are disappointed to hear of your experience at Epsilon, as we are committed to creating a harmonious workplace where all of our associates feel valued. We are keen to hear feedback and partner with our associates to maintain a collaborative, caring and fun environment as we grow. We will take your feedback into account and look at what we can do better to ensure that we are creating a positive work environment for all. Thanks again for taking the time to share your opinion. --Human Resources Team-India
1.0
2 May 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

1. Colorful office interiors (though the cubicles are cheap chinese ones ) 2. Flexible timing 3. Work from home (though there is no work)

Cons

PREAMBLE: In my opinion, Most of the reviews you see here are not genuine to an extent. Because I have been a part of a meeting in which the management was asking everyone to write reviews in Glassdoor and other social medias as people were not turning up for their weekend recruitment drive. Those reviews are early written ones, (right after onboarding) before they get to know the actual story. -------------------- -- REVIEW --- -------------------------- This company started operation in full swing about an year ago in India. They have a well developed stable product suit for Loyalty rewards. Meaning, there wont be any development or even enhancement work for you; because it is pretty simple and stable. It is 101% production monitoring work. I wont say it is production support because it is like monitoring CPU usage or Windows services etc., you hardly get any work. In a month, you may get occupied for a week or so. All you get will be some product configuration and UI style change works. They will ask all high-end questions during interview. But you wont be writing any code using those technologies. In my one year life at Epsilon I have written only less than 100 lines of code. That is also mix of all outdated technologies. I am loosing my skills day-by-day. Some time I was not able to recollect basic syntaxes. because you hardly write any code at Epsilon !!!! Once you join the project, you wont get a KT (Knowledge Transfer); people from US will be playing big time hide-n-seek as they feel insecure about their job. US guys will treat you like rivals as Company started firing their people from US to reduce the cost of operation. (yes it is right, why they want to spend huge money to do some simple job ?? India it is very cheap !!! ). US people wont allow you to ramp-up to the project, they wont share the information or they will make sure that their dependancy is there in the project. Some time they question you or they will shower abuse on you. Be cause they feel that Bangalore guys are grabbing their work. (Yea it is true, because there isn't sufficient quantity of work to share). It is kind of fight between US and India to get work. Some times you win to get some work like add a drop down or disable a button in some of the screens .. ha ha LOL During this year, I have seen many Directors and Senior managers leaving the organisation before they complete a year. This includes highly talented professionals from market leading companies like Adobe, ITC Infotech, Cognizant etc., There were few people disappeared within two weeks. From all these, what I understood is I am late to realize things, those who sensed it ran away. I am writing this review to let you know about the situation before you take a decition to join this company. If you are still feeling OK, then join and enjoy, this would be the right place for you. Summary: -------------- There is something foul smell coming out of this pretend US biggie :( I would recommend this company for 1. Those who dislike learning and They want sterio type work. 2.Those who are not technically talented. 3. Those who want to retire within another 2 years. PS: The term "US People", does not mean NATIVE AMERICANS. most of the people are of Indian Origins or Genuine Indians with H1B work visa. By saying US people I mean only those who are physically present in the United States' geographical boundaries. I hereby state that I never intended for a racial discrimination to US Citizens and only mean that the group of people working for the US Entity.

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Epsilon Response
9y
Firstly, thank you for taking time to voice your concerns. We’re disappointed to hear about your experience as it is certainly not the kind of environment we believe we’ve created in our quest to become of India’s great places to work. Whilst Epsilon, has had a global presence for many years, we are still very nascent in India. Any start-up venture will go through a maturity journey where capabilities will need to be sharpened; client credibility will need to be built; and critical systems will need to be put into place so that we drive true value. We are currently ensuring that the basics are right; and you will be pleased to know that we have started supporting the design, development and release of independent loyalty/CRM/digital solutions. If you are not involved in these large scale complex projects, then we suggest you to get in touch with your manager to understand more and get involved. We still have a journey to go through to truly establish ourselves in the market. We will face challenges but we look to associates like you to help us achieve our goals. We are constantly learning as we move forward .and we aspire to be nimble and adapt rapidly. We are definitely concerned about the points you have made, and we encourage you to reach out to your Manager/Business Unit Head/Human Resources to open a constructive dialogue. Again, appreciate your candid feedback. Let’s work together to overcome challenges we face.
3.0
1 Mar 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

• The company matches your 401K contributions dollar for dollar, up to 5 percent of your salary. • Telecommuting is an option for many technology professionals. • The baseline products are solid cash cows that will continue generating revenue for the company for the foreseeable future. • Many S&P/Fortune 500 clients. • Sustainable growth, about half of which is organic. • The worker bee class consists of many brilliant, talented people. • You can form tight bonds on the project teams you work on. There are many highly performing teams, and people get along with one another across different disciplines. • About 1 in 5 employees will quickly advance their careers with promotions and increased responsibility. Commentary: As stated in the review title, Epsilon first and foremost is a marketing company that does technology, and not the other way around. This is important to keep in mind. The people making technology decisions are not technologically-oriented people. They are marketers. As such, they know how to sell a product. They do not understand technology on a deep level. Structurally, the basic model is the client project team. Every developer is assigned to a project team which often consists of a BSA, a PM, a tech lead, a business lead, and an account manager. The account manager engages the client and negotiates the work for the team. The PM and the tech lead provide estimates to the account lead, and break the work up into manageable tasks for the developers. As a developer, you will spend most of your time interacting with members on your client project team, and little time with anyone else. In some cases, a developer may interact with his or her manager once a week or even once every two weeks. Your performance feedback comes from members on your project team. Culturally, the company is divided into those who do the work and those who do not. The latter is a fairly large class consisting of about a third of all employees. Ostensibly, these people manage the people doing the work. In reality, these are people who have been promoted through the ranks, in large part due to the company's vitality curve ("rank and yank") system. After many years of this system, the most outstanding workers have been promoted, and gradually everyone else has been fired or has left the company. The class of employees who actually do work is youth-oriented. The company recruits interns from local colleges and offers them jobs with the company. As an entry-level employee, you often will be expected to work long hours (50-60 hours per week) to meet the tight deadlines negotiated by the account manager. If you work hard and are talented, you will likely be promoted frequently over the course of a few years -- this will happen to 1 in 5 employees. Within 5 years at the company, you will be a manager. At this point, your work/life balance improves dramatically.

Cons

• Compensation -- at least for IT professionals -- is approximately 15-20 percent below the current market rate. (Note: this is offset somewhat by the company's extremely generous 401K match program and the availability of telecommuting -- you have to factor both of these in to see if Epsilon will work for you) • Too many managers who do little or nothing. More than a third of employees hold a title of director or VP. This creates significant overhead for the company, and creates a highly politicized environment as these managers attempt to justify their purpose. • Older technologies. It's the Microsoft stack and Oracle, and both are about 3-4 years behind current versions. • Corporate politics. Politics are an inevitable part of any organization. Epsilon is worse than most. Decisions are often driven by individuals trying to exert their power, and are often not data-driven. • An officious HR department. The primary responsibilities of HR appear to provide a lengthy regimen of mandatory compliance and training courses, which the HR department rigorously enforces. Many of these required courses were inspired by a famous data breach that affected the company in 2011, and by lawsuits from former employees. HR also oversees the company's rank-and-yank system, which ranks every employee in the company from first to last. This task is inevitably unfair, as it compares employees with the same titles working in different locations under different managers and under different project teams involving different clients. It is literally comparing apples to oranges and justifying it by saying that both are ripe fruits. • Bureaucracy. More than a third of all employees are directors or VPs or above. This creates a very structured environment, and sometimes makes it difficult to get things done in a timely fashion. • Great potential for age discrimination. A review process that may discriminate against older employees. This is because its rank-and-yank process hurts older employees and favors younger ones. Commentary: Epsilon is a youth-oriented company. It thrives on a constant stream of new bright, young workers. Many of the workers these workers are replacing are older ones, and sometimes not through attrition or advancement. On occasion, these older workers are forced out by the company, and sometimes the process is not entirely fair or clear to the targeted employee. There are little company resources for older workers who feel they are victims of age discrimination. If you go to the company's internal ethics website, it discusses assistance against all types of illegal discrimination -- gender, race, ethnicity, religion. Curiously missing is anything about age discrimination. It's almost as if senior management forgot that it is against the law to discriminate on the basis of age, or it just decided not to help victims of age-based discrimination. As mentioned earlier, the company ranks every one of its employees, from first to last. The people doing the ranking are not your manager or even your project team members. It is senior management and HR. Those employees rated among the top 20 percent receive raises and are promoted; the next 70 percent receive cost-of-living adjustments; the bottom 10 percent are fired or encouraged to leave the company. The ranking system is extremely political, as most employees work on project teams and the people doing the ranking have never met or interacted with the employees they rank. You will know where you fall in the ranking system after your first review, based on your salary increase and whether or not you are promoted. Of the 70 percent you are rated as "Performer," one of two things will happen to you. You will eventually move up the curve until you are promoted after many years (5-8 years), or you will eventually move down the curve until you are placed in the bottom 10 percent. This is because the company is constantly cutting off the tail of the vitality curve. As the company eliminates under-performing employees, more and more employees who are actually performing get moved to the under-performing category and targeted for termination. This is what happened to me. For years, I was part of that middle 70 percent for years, and I saw people below me getting fired every year. Eventually, I got placed in that category even though I received outstanding feedback from my manager, my account manager, and my entire project team and we met every single one of our goals. We even generated almost a million dollars in unplanned revenue for the company. The client was happy with me, my account manager was happy with me, my team was happy with me. It didn't matter -- it was my turn to take the hit, per the process Irrespective of the case, if you are among the 70 percent of employees who are rated as a "performer," you can expect to be paid 15-20 percent below the market for many years. Those who are ranked "Outstanding" will get promoted into management, creating a permanent class of youthful workers.

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Epsilon Response
10y
Thank you for your review and detailed feedback. We have read and discussed your points here with our extended HR team, and we are taking into consideration. We appreciate your input and hope that you will work with us to become part of the solution to make Epsilon a better place. We wish you the best of luck in your career here and hope you will continue to feel comfortable sharing your feedback with your manager or local HR representative. Thank you! --Human Resources Team
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