Look someplace else - Senior Consultant Ellucian Employee Review

1.0
21 Apr 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Permits employees to work from home. 1 extra week off for volunteering. $350 stipend for personal health.

Cons

Just when you finish training the newly hired consultants, they will fire you. No job security. Had 4 riifs while I was there. They talk a good talk - but it’s just jargon & senior level management operate the opposite way & help develop your career & support you. Look elsewhere.

avatar
Ellucian Response
3y
Thanks for your review and your more than two decades of commitment and service to Ellucian. Sorry to hear about your experience but hopefully you were able to find stability, security and growth throughout your career with the company. We just completed our annual employee engagement survey and for the second consecutive year, 86% our employees would recommend Ellucian as a great place to work, which we are thrilled to see.

Explore other reviews about Ellucian

5.0
11 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Work-life balance is amazing, great team to work with. Lots of opportunities to advance and learn new things

Cons

None. I've had an amazing experience working for Ellucian!

1
1.0
14 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Ellucian had some genuinely brilliant people. I mean real talent. Smart engineers, sharp support people who could look at a broken system and somehow see both the problem and the political disaster hiding behind it. A lot of people there cared deeply about higher ed. They understood that colleges and universities are not just “customers.” They are institutions trying to keep students moving, faculty supported, and operations alive with systems that often looked held together by duct tape, PLSQL scripts, and institutional trauma.

Cons

Then there was the C-suite. Every company has executives. That’s normal. But this group often felt less like corporate stewards and more like LinkedIn influencers who accidentally wandered into an ERP company. They seemed distant. Aloof. Not deeply engaged with the actual work, the clients, or the people carrying the weight. There was a lot of executive polish, a lot of corporate language, a lot of “vision,” but not always the kind of grounded leadership that makes employees say, “I trust these people with the future of the company.” At times, it felt like the people closest to the customers understood the business better than the people paid the most to lead it.

4
See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All