Welcome aboard, if you hate your life. - Software Engineer Pearson Employee Review

1.0
1 Nov 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Few things that are worth mentioning are moderate pay, equals the market. HR teams conducts events, gatherings pretty often. Office is in the centre of the city.

Cons

Brace yourself, there are plenty of cons. 1. Not so good pay package. 2. Hikes are too less. 3. Bonus is not reasonable. 4. Too much of politics. 5. HR teams just listen to what superior tells about you, generally personal problems with you. 6. Mark your attendance every day. Otherwise, deal with managers in person or loss of pay even though you are in office, they still feel IT techies are in school. 7. No parking space. 8. No cafeteria. 9. No work life Balance. 10. HR expects you to be in office by 9, but your teams wants you to be till 11:30pm in the night. Both of the expectations has to be met and if not, your appraisals goes for a toss. These silly points are considered for reasoning you when you ask them for your rating or bonus. Ridiculous and stupidity. 11. Managers and HR expect you to be in office for minimum 9 hours even after completing work. 12. No Work From Home option. 13. Attending late night meetings from home also is not entertained. 14. No food available after 7pm in the surroundings. You either pack your food for dinner or order online. 15. Get ready to pay police fines for your vehicles being towed away. You have to park your vehicle on the road. Very limited parking space and company doesn’t even care about security of vehicles. 16. Car Parking’s are one more bizarre. Cars are parked too close to each other, many at times drivers handle your cars too harshly and end up getting scratches. Especially in Bangalore Divyasree chambers office. 17. Managers are stagnant in this company from decades. These people don’t have any knowledge about the IT industry. Managers doesn’t know and don’t encourage conferences, exploring technologies or new initiatives are completely discouraged. 18. Attending training’s aren’t encouraged. 19. People work on AWS but no one knows even basics of the AWS, they just write code from google or stacktrace. 20. Process and standards are too outdated. 21. No planning, no foresight. We will be asked to work on weekends, late nights, on public holidays. And no overtime is paid, or no allowance. If you feel your career is precious to you, this company is not for you. Otherwise if you just want to pass time with absolutely no learning, you can think about it.

Explore other reviews about Pearson

5.0
22 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Smart people, supportive environment and good benefits

Cons

Tight deadlines and it gets busy at times

2.0
31 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Remote, $2300 a month for not that many hours of work.

Cons

The widespread incoherence of Pearson is irritating me to a significant degree. -the hiring committee mentioned the wrong pay rate so I spent a month worrying about money -the payroll agency shared the actual pay rate which was sustainable ($2,300 a month, my bills are $1,800, $2,100 with your fee baked in. - I procrastinated this week because I didn't know how to read the bureaucratese on the assignment - I figured out how to read the bureaucratese and went back to K. saying, I think I've developed something genuinely useful as a reference material for new employees. I had to synthesize information from 100 pages of PowerPoints into a two page document which cleared up the anxiety I had about how to start -can't believe K. and other managers worked as Classroom Teachers because the way they scatter information has no coherence. I had to peruse numerous documents in the SharePoint "cloud" folders, take notes, and develop a master reference document before I could interpret how to develop questions based on the bureaucratese. -I was never the most organized classroom teacher but my students knew what was expected of them. I put dates on assignments that were linear and in a consecutive sequence of beginning of week, midweek, end of week. If students had a test, I made a review sheet that was a consolidated 2-7 pages. I would never expect even my Honors students to consult dozens of pages in order to study. -I told K. about the reference document I developed and she met me partway: she recognizes one aspect of the process could be better done, new employees could be more adequately trained on the acronyms we use. That's like 25% of the way to completion. I had to figure out that "Administration 2" means the second half of a course AKA Economics for 5th and 7th graders, and 11E just means 11th grade Economics. But instead of the standards being sorted by subject, they are sorted by grade. Since the standards start with 5 for anything 5th grade, 7 for anything 7th grade, 11 for anything 11th grade, it would be coherent to just combine the standards into one document and organize by subject. -Some companies are smart, caring people trapped inside of bad systems. Like classroom teachers. Pearson feels like a repeat of my last company in its poor design and incoherence but less abusive. H) Pearson assigned us 11 questions in a spreadsheet. I think fewer mistakes would be made if they paid a college student Education major $15 an hour to type up our assignments with the criteria they want for each question. Our time is worth $30-$100 an hour. We are subject matter experts. But comprehending the bureaucratese drains cognitive energy. -I had anxiety about getting all 11 questions produced then K. said, oh you only turn in one question for the first week. Something they never said on the Microsoft Teams meeting we had last Wednesday for onboarding. If I received a sheet with 11 questions in the cloud and my name on it that's what I'm going to think I need to accomplish. But K. put in another email, only submit one question for a week. Email should be subordinate to the cloud, the cloud should supersede email ex. The federal government supremacy clause: federal government has greater authority than state governments. -Spent an hour trying to save the questions I developed in Abbi, only for them not to process and upload. Abbi feels clunky with technical failures of the early internet

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