Fast paced and driven corporate culture - Principal Consultant Capco Employee Review

4.0
Oct 3, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Capco is a fast paced and demanding place to work. Employees are given a lot of autonomy with clients to design and deliver complex transformational initiatives. The great majority of the time, we are engaged with clients on some of their most strategic initiatives and working on projects that are intellectually challenging.

Cons

Capco manages a broadly distributed workforce across the US and Canada. Employees outside of the core office locations (NY, Chicago, Charlotte, Washington DC, and Toronto) or assigned to remote client locations can be challenged to stay engaged in the employee community.

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5.0
May 28, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great people and atmosphere here

Cons

No complaints in this company

1
4.0
May 15, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Varied client work — Different clients and project types, which keeps things interesting. Real project mobility — You can move between projects when you advocate for yourself (within reason). Approachable leadership — Senior leaders are open to conversations if you reach out. Good development resources — Plenty of training and growth opportunities if you take advantage of them. Strong teams — Colleagues are smart, capable, and great to work with. Entrepreneurial environment — New ideas are encouraged, and there’s room to take initiative.

Cons

Long hours vary by project — Like most any professional job, some engagements require extended hours for prolonged periods, but work–life balance really depends on the client and team. Additional internal responsibilities — Depending on level, there can be a significant amount of firm‑support work outside of client delivery. Domain alignment not guaranteed — You may not always be staffed on projects that match your domain expertise. Coaching alignment constraints — Coaching relationships are tied to domain, which limits flexibility in choosing formal mentors. Long engagements (sometimes) — Some projects run for long durations or through multiple extensions. It can provides stability but may reduce variety in client and project experience depending on what you’re looking for.

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