employer cover photo
employer logo
employer logo

Boston Consulting Group

Engaged employer

Echos of a once-great past - Project Leader Boston Consulting Group Employee Review

3.0
Feb 25, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The pay is top-notch for sure, and generally your colleagues in the rank-and-file are outstanding. You'll learn a ton about yourself and many industries while developing professional skills that last for life. If you play your cards right, you'll have friends that last for long after you exit and a new job that perfectly matches your professional goals.

Cons

BCG is the cradle of professional services, but one cannot eternally live in a cradle. The turnover is high, and it's exasperated by consistently abysmal strategic planning by NAMR leadership when it comes to recruiting targets. The workload and expectations are somewhere between extreme and impossible -- forget any chance of having a social life outside of work. The environment pushes out new parents without fail. While people are cordial, stress levels run extremely high and frequently push hardy people to the breaking point of taking leaves for mental health reasons. The value proposition of BCG as an MBB is rapidly changing as NAMR leadership pushes it to grow at all costs. The level of talent is declining along with price points, leading to steady cuts in perks and a decline in culture while the hours increase. BCG is becoming more reminiscent of a Deloitte or Accenture with the move towards implementation consulting and thinner margins. As OPPL are worked harder, they are left with less time to develop A/Cs and future waves of talent... leaving the next generation even less-equipped to do the job in a vicious feedback loop. BCG once occupied a regional staffing niche between Bain's local model and McKinsey's global model, but the new system realignment has meant even stronger barriers to internal staffing, and teams are often unable to find the PA expertise they need for delivery within their region. BCG NAMR is becoming a loose confederation of franchises loosely held together by PAs that roll up into one system P&L. The Atlanta office particularly struggles to promote and retain a diverse talent pool. There's a reason the face page of the MDP team isn't remotely close to that of incoming hire classes. I saw little to indicate this would change anytime soon.

Explore other reviews about Boston Consulting Group

5.0
Jun 18, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great people, projects, and support

Cons

Tough working hours and politics

2.0
May 14, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

BCG has top tier benefits, really smart colleagues, good in-office perks, and has a great company reputation. This was a huge part of my experience and has made me go back forth about my decision to leave.

Cons

This is speaking as someone who is not on the consulting side. On my particular team, office politics were very strong with little to no opportunities for people outside of the inner circle to assimilate. More broadly, I feel like the salary trajectory was a little slow, there is a lack of location mobility and and promotions can be hard to come by. Even so, I have personally seen exceptions be made for certain people. More broadly, being located in North America can be difficult since new roles are being open in other regions which is making internal mobility next to impossible. If you have any dissatisfaction with your current team, title, or level - there's a real possibility that you will have to wait multiple years before being able to make meaningful shifts towards your long term career goals.

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All