A good place to start your career - Analyst Hanover Research Employee Review

3.0
16 Mar 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-As an analyst, the people I worked with were the biggest pro at Hanover. Smart, kind, generous people. It is so easy to be siloed with the type of work Hanover does, but every analyst I worked with was open to helping, teaching, and supporting others. I have made lifelong friends here. -Hanover is a good place to start your career. You are given a lot of responsibility in terms of the deliverables you produce for clients, but you also have a lot of structures, procedures, and support systems in place to help you get your footing. -Onboarding for analysts is excellent. Everyone starts with a week (or two) of trainings and low-stakes mini or practice projects to help them get accustomed to the methods/tools they will use at Hanover. -For the first year or so, you’ll learn a lot. New tools, new methods, new industries, you’ll learn something new every day. That’s what makes it such a great place to start your career. -Hanover is small enough where you get to wear a lot of hats. You can take more responsibility if you work hard and take initiative. -After your first successful performance review, you can work from home one day per week. -Health plan is pretty good. -Free snacks. Free coffee.

Cons

-Culture can be toxic. Unfortunately, Hanover grew at a rate that was not sustainable for the structure they had. There’s lots of restructuring happening all the time to address these issues, and, to Hanover’s credit, I truly believe they are moving into the right direction. However, at present, there are a lot of blind spots for those in upper management roles such that a few bad apples in middle management can ruin people’s entire view of the company. I actually really, really loved what I did at Hanover, but thinking about my time there, my fond memories of my job are soured by a few people that should have never, under any circumstances, been allowed to manage people. While I don’t think it’s entirely the case, Hanover’s lack of action about known bad apples made it feel like the type of company that does not care about its analysts’ well-being. Countless people could raise complaints about one bad apple, but nothing would ever change. It propagated a culture in which analysts felt that their words, experiences, and opinions had no value. I guess you’ll just have to take my word for it that this was not a feeling isolated to me and my experiences, but I had quite a few co-workers that shared the sentiment. -Middle management (CDs/CEDs) are not incentivized at all to manage projects in the best interests of the analysts working under them. They are incentivized to please the client. This often means overpromising what can feasibly be delivered in the time we have, changing project scopes at the last minute, and a ridiculous amount of overtime for analysts. Analysts that do not work overtime in order to meet these demands are often reviewed poorly. Meanwhile, as I said before, upward feedback from analysts feels ignored. Not all managers are like this. There are several good, caring managers. -If you want additional responsibilities/a promotion, be prepared to do all of the work of the next level for several months without being paid for the additional work/responsibilities you have. I know that this is the case in a lot of companies in the U.S.; however, just because it’s common does not make it right. You’re already underpaid compared to other market research analysts in a high cost of living area, so taking on all of the risk and none of the reward of a role is adding insult to injury. -Salary is low. Yes, HR is upfront about this in the interview process, but you should also understand that if you do not get promoted during the performance review cycle, you rarely get a raise, even to adjust for inflation. If you are not from the area, please do research on the cost of living.

avatar
Hanover Research Response
7y
Thank you for your feedback. I am very glad to hear you loved the work you did here, and am sorry that experience was soured by a few bad interactions. As you know, we take performance management really seriously at Hanover. When it appears that someone is struggling in a managerial role, for example, we make every effort to provide that individual with mentoring and remediation support. There are a handful of instances where it still doesn't work out, and it appears that is what you experienced. Our recently introduced teaming structures should also foster the kind of teamwork and communication you correctly identify as critical. We wish you the best in your future endeavors.

Explore other reviews about Hanover Research

5.0
14 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Company's culture is great. Lots of nice and brilliant people to work with.

Cons

Not a lot of opportunities for advancement.

avatar
Hanover Research Response
3w
Thank you for your review. We are happy to hear you enjoyed working at Hanover! Please feel free to reach out to peoplesupport@hanoverresearch.com with any more information or if you have questions about our annual performance review process and career pathways. -The People Team
3.0
23 Jun 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The people and the clients

Cons

Leadership is too far from the work to understand how things actually function

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All