I recently left from being an SM at EY and would make a couple of comments:1) £55k for an SC is towards the top end of the SC 'scale'. I use inverted commas because there was no published scale, but a new promote to SC would typically be on ~£45k and a new promote to Manager would start on ~£60k.2) You would be eligible for a pay review in the summer of 2014 if you join before the end of 2013 as you would have been around long enough to get a year end rating.3) However, you are right to think that promotion in 2014 would be the longest of long shots. But, 18 months is more than enough to eviodence a promotion to Manager in 2015, this would not be unusual for an experienced hire.4) But be mindful, what happened last year is that promotions went to the bottom of the in grade pay scale, so if you were promoted in summer of 2015, don't expect a big pay rise if you are one of the higher paid SCs (I know an SC who got recruited in on £58k, got promoted 12 months later to Mgr with a pay rise to £60k...they were not happy). That said I don't know if they've done that again this year. 5) If they did keep doing this though, you could find yourself spending the next three years with no opportunity to progress beyond the very low £60ks, as follows:- Oct 13 to Sept 14 on your entry level of £55k (pay rises take affect from Oct 1)- Oct 14 to Sept 15 on your entry level plus a basic pay rise in summer 2014 (you would probably struggle to get higher than the mid level rating as EY force ratings into a distribution where only 20-25% of folks get the higher two levels)- Oct 15 - Sept 16 on the entry level salary for a newly promoted Manager (which allowing for inflation is unlikely to be higher than £62-63k)6) EY often bring in hires with a strong CV with little consulting experience (in their late 20s, early 30s) as top end SCs with the challenge for them to show they can manage in the environment and then move onto Manager. I used to see some young'uns who had joined straight from uni and had flown through the ranks, but they are the exception.