I-CAP - AWS DevOps Engineer Capgemini Employee Review

5.0
Mar 16, 2026
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

Capgemini offers a smooth interview process, structured joining and onboarding, supportive work culture, strong learning opportunities, and good work‑life balance, though growth and salaries can vary by project and some processes may feel slow at times.

Cons

interview stages is too long taking process but its good only

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Capgemini Response
3mo
Thank you for giving a 5‑star rating and sharing your detailed feedback. We appreciate your acknowledgment of Capgemini’s smooth interview process, structured joining and onboarding experience, supportive work culture, strong learning opportunities, and the good work‑life balance that helps create a positive professional environment. Your recognition of the availability of opportunities to learn new technologies and contribute to diverse projects is equally valued. We also acknowledge your comment regarding the interview stages being a long process, while noting your view that it ultimately remains beneficial. Your feedback is important to us, and we remain committed to enhancing our processes and maintaining an environment that supports growth, collaboration, and continuous learning for all employees.

Explore other reviews about Capgemini

5.0
Jul 5, 2026
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

Company provides training on soft skills and technical skills prior to placing on a project.

Cons

Client contracts can end unexpectedly so you may not get to work on a project long term and change from project to project.

1.0
Jun 30, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

there are no pros for this company

Cons

I was laid off after spending several months on the bench, with "lack of available projects" cited as the reason. However, another consultant in the same role who was also without an active client engagement was retained. As a woman and racial minority, I could not ignore the disparity in how these decisions appeared to be made. Before my termination, I reported being recorded without my consent and raised concerns about conduct that I believed reflected implicit bias. I was referred to as "URM" instead of by my name or role, encouraged toward race based employee resource groups rather than meaningful career opportunities, and repeatedly advocated for fair project placement while on the bench. My employment ended shortly after I raised these concerns. Following my termination, I pursued the matter through the appropriate internal and legal channels. I provided documentation supporting my concerns and gave the company multiple opportunities to investigate and resolve the issues. Rather than meaningfully addressing the evidence or acknowledging the seriousness of the allegations, the company denied wrongdoing, offered what I viewed as a nominal severance, and declined to accept accountability. Employees deserve confidence that concerns about discrimination and retaliation will be investigated objectively and fairly. My experience left me with the opposite impression.

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