I would give 0 stars if I could but the lowest I could go was 1 star. Throughout my time at Friars House London, I was in a team managed by two young inexperienced line managers. The best day of my career at Experian was when I handed in my badge and laptop on my last day.
The first line manager was clueless and had no idea what was going on in our daily work lives and also had an ego and could not take any criticisms and had very poor people management skills.
The second manager who succeeded him had a good idea of what was happening in the team and had better people management skills but often had her hands tied by senior management and found it hard to keep everyone happy.
Flexibility was non-existent. There were mechanisms in place to make this role flexible and agile but both my line managers and senior management refused to let that happen and had us turn up and leave at a set time every day, which was one of the major reasons I left.
Career progression was also non-existent. For university graduates like me, we see this entry-level job as a stepping stone, so after a little more than a year, I started getting sick of it and as there was no room to progress internally, I moved onto pastures new and made the best decision of my life back then to leave.
Senior management were ineffective. They had high expectations and yet were good at creating barriers for us. The P4G was a fairly bad ratings system but at least it somehow got the job done. It was replaced by "Elevate" which was a mess and a fiasco, not only useless, it also took up a lot more of our precious time that could have been used for our personal development. I got the same rating whether I worked my socks off or did just the bare minimum to get the job done. Over time, I saw no point in giving my all so I did the bare minimum. The rating system is flawed and does not reward hard work.
All in all, if you are a junior employee at Experian, get the FTSE100 experience and stick it on your CV then leave.