Average company nothing exceptional - Transfer Agency Associate II State Street Employee Review

3.0
14 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

• Strong exposure to the end-to-end transfer agency lifecycle (dealing, reporting, distributions, static data maintenance, cash breaks and client queries), which is a great foundation for broader funds roles. • Good client/service experience, with regular interaction across internal teams and (depending on the desk) external stakeholders. • A good entry point into finance in Ireland, especially for building operational knowledge and transferable skills (controls, attention to detail, prioritisation). • Benefits package is strong for the level. • Good job stability if you prioritize security over rapid progression or top-of-market pay.

Cons

• If you land in a disorganised team, the role can become very stressful—long hours, constant firefighting and pressure that depends heavily on management quality. • Salary is not competitive versus comparable roles in Dublin; other institutions often pay materially more for similar responsibilities, and compensation reviews can feel disappointing. • Office environment is not good. Teams don't talk to each other and it's a complete silence. You feel guilty if you talk to someone in a more friendly/informal way. • Career progression can be limited, and it can feel like external hires are prioritized over developing and promoting people internally. So, hard workers seem to not be valued inside the company. • You may encounter uneven capability at more senior levels, which can lead to inefficiency and avoidable rework.

Explore other reviews about State Street

5.0
11 Feb 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Pay, Benefits, Time off, Flexibility

Cons

I can't think of any

1.0
14 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Remote work is (rarely) an option, though the approval process is extremely slow and bureaucratic. There are a few well-meaning colleagues who genuinely try to drive positive change before burning out.

Cons

Onboarding and HR processes are severely broken, taking 11 months to approve remote status and failing to prepare basic equipment for day one. The workplace culture is deeply hostile, with anger and yelling functioning as the default communication style across teams. Leadership turnover is rampant, resulting in constant re-organizations, splintered teams, and a total lack of strategic direction. Role clarity is non-existent, forcing employees to invent their own daily tasks while receiving entirely contradictory instructions. Direct management is completely absent; I went seven months without any contact from my boss before being laid off via a three-word instant message and short call.

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