Just left my Big 4 job last month after two years and wanted to share an honest take for those considering it. The Good: - Brand name on your CV opens a LOT of doors - You learn fast — probably faster than anywhere else…
TM has best job security, Maxis pays better and moves faster, Celcom is mid on both. Depends on priorities.
Been here about 14 months. Here's my honest take: Work pace: Fast. Like really fast. Quarterly OKRs mean you're always in crunch mode. If you're used to slower GLC pace this will be a shock. People: Majority young (mid…
Training is solid and the brand name opens doors. Salary around RM3,200-3,600. Good for stability.
After 4 years at a GLC I joined a 25-person startup. No approval chains, chaotic. Stressful at first but I feel more alive.
3 years here. Pay is decent, culture is corporate and political at senior levels. WFH is 2 days. Career mobility within the group is a real advantage.
Pace is extreme. Deadlines are tight. Cross-timezone collaboration means late nights. Pay is above market. Learning curve is steep and fast.
Security is unmatched. Increment is small but predictable. Culture depends enormously on your department head.
Every problem was a growth opportunity. Burnout was met with resilience advice. Quit after 9 months.
Experience varies by project. Training is good. Exit ops are excellent. Promotion timelines are long.
Say yes to everything at first, learn the informal org chart, make friends with seniors. Don't try to impress through hours immediately.
Shell, Intel, Maybank, and some larger GLCs. They have actual training budgets, not just an annual webinar.
Pay above market, strong L&D. Work-life balance better than 5 years ago. Shell brand travels internationally.
Very hierarchical. Long hours Oct-Mar. Pay starts around RM3,200. Social events are fun. Leadership quality varies.
Great pay, good benefits, world-class engineering exposure. Bureaucracy can be slow. Malaysia team is stable despite global layoffs.
Stable, well-run, but not high-growth. Pay is average. Best media/broadcast exposure in Malaysia.
Fast-paced, high pressure for sales targets. Culture is energetic. Benefits are good. Good for those starting in customer management or retail ops.
High intensity. expect 12-14 hour days during peak deal season. Learning curve is vertical. Brand is very well respected. Stipend RM1,500-2,000 for pupils. Good for ambitious legal grads.
Dynamic, casual culture. High energy. You have to be self-driven. Perks like travel discounts are great. Pay is mid-market. Office environment at RedQ is world-class.
Structured environment, very process-oriented. Good benefits. It feels very corporate but you get to work with global teams. Pay is mid-to-high market for finance/ops roles.