SEC Reviews

4.5

85% would recommend to a friend

(305 total reviews)

Mary Jo White

77% approve of CEO

66% positive business outlook

SEC has an employee rating of 4.5 out of 5 stars, based on 305 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The SEC employee rating is 24% above average for employers within the Government and public administration industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

305 reviews
4.0
6 Jun 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

SEC is on the SK pay schedule verses the GS pay schedule so salaries are much higher to compete with wall street and law firms. Although it is very difficult to get into management (SK 15, 16, 17 or Senior Officer), most persons are at the SK 13 or SK14 level with good salaries. A typical SK 14 ranges from $150k to to regional cap of about $192k. Work hours are excellent and one is expected to work 8 1/2 hours but there is no expectation of late night or weekend work. Generally smart people are attracted to the SEC so it is a good group of colleagues. There are many opportunities for training. Because the organization is relatively small if one is motivated you can always find challenging projects and play key leadership roles. There is a great deal of job security. It seems very difficult, almost impossible to get fired which is shocking for those coming from private sector. There is a lot of turnover, it is revolving door of management - which can actually be a good thing to keep expertise fresh and occasionally create a promotion opportunity.

Cons

It is difficult, very very difficult, to progress to the management level of SK15 or above. It is especially difficult if you are not a lawyer. An an MBA with 18+ years of experience I'm compensated well given the work life balance. However, it is frustrating that there is not more value placed on analytics and finance skills at the SEC and the primary focus is on legal expertise in the Division of Enforcement and elsewhere. There are also pockets of extreme inefficiency and pockets of staff who work like the (bad) stereotype of government workers -- as in barely competent and barely working - perhaps 25% or so. Salary increases are very small generally unless you are a Senior Officer (and there are less than 200 senior officers of the 5000 or so staff). If one is ambitious and wants to continue to move forward there is more likelihood of lateral moves than moving up. The upper most management doesn't make that much more than staff, unlike in the private sector. For example, many Senior Officer make $190-$230k (where $230k is the maximum). Many staff also make close to $200k. Therefore, some Senior Officers try to exert their power through things such as keeping junior staff out of projects they could well handle. It is an unnecessarily hierarchical structure in many Divisions and Offices. another con is that it is nearly impossible to get hired and through the black hole of usajobs.gov.

4.0
21 Jul 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good pay with the SK scale - the pay rivals private sector for some positions. Some increased stability working in public sector verses private sector and that exists here; from this perspective there is slightly less stress as you aren't always working under the threat of layoffs. Their is an employee union which functions as a strong advocate for staff to ensure management doesn't get out of control which is a benefit I've never seen in the private sector. Another benefit of the union is they negotiate pay increases that benefit everyone. There are lots of talented staff and management from top tier law firms, consulting firms, and financial companies. The agency is large enough with more than 5,000 staff, that you can move laterally into different positions to have different opportunities. The agency hires lots of external consultants to help drive efficiencies so they are actually trying to improve operations. The SEC is a long standing and well respected regulator so those working in the two biggest divisions - enforcement and examinations - can effectively regulate securities firms, broker-dealers, investment advisors, securities branches of big banks, etc. The SEC doesn't often get pushed around as a regulator. For example, if you compare the SEC to newer regulators like the CFPB, the SEC is exponentially more effective in terms of reputation, resources, in-house expertise, and overall ability to effectively regulate which translates into a happier quality of life as an SEC staff person. The benefits are also good. Normal benefits like 401k and TSP, etc, but they also have a student loan repayment program that pays up to about $10,000 a year; very helpful for those with lots of debt. You can also qualify for federal service debt forgiveness if that ever ends up actually working (takes 10 years so....). They also pay for current education like getting a master's degree on them if needed for your position. It's hard to care about a pension when you are young, but they do have that which is a great benefit.

Cons

The normal cons of working for the government- excessive bureaucracy. It is nearly impossible to get hired if someone isn't pulling you in. The hiring process functions like a black hole- people apply with no understanding of why you never hear back; it is almost completely arbitrary whether HR people select persons for the "certification list" (i.e. the list of applicants certified by HR as meeting standards of the job). HR people don't have proper expertise to make selections and then it is usually personal relationships that determine which arbitrary 3 or so people are called in to interview. Almost every management position is already tagged to a person when it is posted, so most people have no real chance. Also, the complex veterans preference rules end up blocking many, many non-vets because the veterans have a different, lower standard (nothing against vets, those are just the rules). All of the government hiring rules are complex yet followed unevenly by different managers. So for hiring, unless there is an unusually talented HR staff person working with an unusually knowledgeable hiring manager, the hiring process is just messed up. It is also nearly impossible to get promoted to the management level of 15 or higher as a staff person. The SEC operates mostly like a large law firm (the enforcement division, made up of lawyers, is the most powerful division of the agency) which is great if you have a law degree, but not so great for everyone else. For example, the vast majority of management roles require a law degree, which isn't really necessary but benefits the law firm structure. Lawyers can also circumvent some of the complex hiring rules which is another reason they hire so many lawyers. The culture is the typical old boys network with the vast majority of senior leaders being white, older men. Some white women have started to rise to management but not consistently. Overall there is nearly zero diversity and zero concern about diversity as evidenced by looking at the numbers; this can be frustrating for non whites who express concerns about this but it is just a fact of life at this agency (not very dissimilar to most agencies as well as private firms). The normal politics that exist in every corporate structure exist here - however, profit is not the primary motivation. It seems people are more motivated by power, ability to influence the hiring process, politics, and keeping their jobs (also normal government "cons"). There is a lot of uncertainty given that the SEC is part of the government appropriations process - when the government shuts down, staff might not be paid. This can impact your life constantly and drastically in terms of not having dependable income, needing to rely on credit cards, taking months to "recover" after you haven't been paid for months, etc. While it doesnt happen often, when it does it can be a disaster. The uncertainty about funding also leads to inefficiency in operations--the agency often doesn't know what money is coming in and when so hiring and major projects get put on hold or thrown off schedule. Having worked at multiple government agencies, the SEC seems like the least bad in terms of all the typical government problems (bureaucracy, pettiness, bad staff/management who can both hold on to jobs for too long, funding problems). Staff seem more knowledgeable than at other agencies and people do get fired or removed for poor performance. Another con though is that there are certainly those few government staff, often in highly paid management, who are just hanging around and should have long since retired. Overall, people care about their work more than other agencies, but things still move ridiculously slowly.

4.0
20 Jun 2017

Counsel

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great work-life balance, interesting cases, a lot of autonomy and responsibility, great training and resources.

Cons

Can be solitary, people are nice but largely keep to themselves so the environment is not very collegial. Potential for advancement and supervisory positions very limited because a lot of attorneys stay there for decades; definitely not an up or out structure. Pay is down in recent years.

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Glassdoor has 505 SEC reviews submitted anonymously by SEC employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if SEC is right for you.