Company to avoid - IT Consultant gTeam FZ Employee Review

1.0
5 Mar 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The wages are "anonymized", you will get paid with a card that will allow you to bypass the IRS You can work from home.

Cons

- There's no challenge at all - They will assign you to a mission, your manager will never follow your activity, and it is impossible to get in touch with the managers. - It's an indian company with 2 head offices, 1 in Dubai to avoid taxes and another one in US, probably just a post box. Gteam belongs to Aurea a mega company that engulfs a lot of bankrupted businesses nowadays . - I the contract they will stipulate that you can be kicked out without notice but this is in case that you'll have a contract, it took me 3 months to have a contract that was partially signed. - Once that you start working for Gteam you will be monitored by a spy software that they will oblige you to put on your PC. Btw, you'll have to use your own equipment, they will not provide any equipment. Them soft that is installed on your PC will take hardcopies of you screen (do not open facebook, skype etc... you'll be kicked out and you'll never get paid). What you are typing clicking on which window you did all that is logged and if you do not have a constant flow of typing you will not get paid. Every 10 minutes and also randomly they will take a your mugshot. If you are not in front of the camera and instead watching the monitor you watch the TV, you'll never get paid. REMEMBER in order to have 8h per day you'll have to spend 12h.... every time you take a break, smoke or drink your cup of tea cannot be invoiced. No health insurance, no retirement plan, no holidays, remember you are a consultant not an employee.

Explore other reviews about gTeam FZ

5.0
12 Aug 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I love being able to work from home, or a coffee shop, or while visiting extended friends/family in a different country, etc. There is no office to work in, which changes the culture dramatically. At IBM, for example, a few people were remote, so they missed all of the hallway conversations or the impromptu architecture discussions at lunch, etc. At gTeam, everybody is remote, so there's nothing to miss. All of our whiteboards are virtual and we eat lunch with our families in our own kitchens. Honestly, the pay is pretty great too. I suspect my previous employers paid a similar amount for me, including buildings, keeping the lights on, HR staff, company events, computers, various perks, etc. But now all of that money goes to me, and I don't need to beg somebody for a better laptop or nicer chair. This is a much better system. I also like the freedom I'm given. Granted, I have a senior job in management, but I'm never forced into stupid architectures or deploying on some silly mainframe/Winblows like I've had to deal with at other companies. Perhaps said another way: the political BS seems very low here. We only argue about what's best for our clients, not about angering some VP/vendor somewhere. I know some people see this as a con, but I love it that they don't keep under performers. You can't suck and stay here. You can make mistakes, that's fine, but you can't keep making the same mistakes over and over.

Cons

I sometimes miss going out for greasy burgers with folks on Fridays. If I had a magic wand, I'd make the recruiting process a little more fair for people who don't get hired. I see that some people here think gTeam gets free work out of people in the Trial phase of the recruiting process. I can clear that up - that's absolutely not the case. They get senior people to solve the coding challenges and then compare incoming recruits to the known answers. There's nothing part of the trial that they don't already have a database of answers for. With that said, people who don't pass the 3 day trial don't get paid. Years ago, they used to pay every candidate. Then some Chinese company put 100 people through the trial with absolutely terrible submissions just to make the 100 x 3 days pay, so management put a stop to that. There needs to be a middle ground though. On that same token, because this company's completely virtual, they get 10x more con-artist trying to steal money than any company I've ever seen. I can understand that - it's more tempting when you don't have to walk in the building and let people get to know you. The downside is that gTeam has much higher security standards, which naturally get in the way sometimes. I can't blame them for it, but it is annoying.

5.0
4 Aug 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I started working with gTeam three years ago, my spouse was relocated and I had to resign after working 10 years for a 500 Fortune public company. Very challenging environment, things mover 10 times faster that in an ordinary organization, personally it has been a great learning and professional experience.

Cons

Long and tough selection process, I had to complete a 5 day simulation. Also the guys you interact with during trial are not so helpful nor friendly.

3
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