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Boston Consulting Group

Engaged Employer

Interesting experience - Project Leader Boston Consulting Group Employee Review

3.0
Dec 10, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Pros: 1) Paycheck and Benefits: Most attractive part, maybe the only motivating factor on some days. 2) Quality of work: Work undertaken by BCG is mostly interesting and potentially impactful. You feel that you are part of a project that can change the way an industry works or client's TSR 3) Clients served: You get to work with leading players, and it is a privilege to share board rooms with CEOs and be able to learn from them 4) BCG MDPs: The Managing Director & Partner team is terrific and one of the major reasons why BCG is a top-tier strategy consulting firm. The amount of information and industry expertise some of the Partners have is jaw-dropping and even C-level execs pay close attention to what a BCG partner has to say. 5) Fellow consultants and non-consulting staff: Most of the consultants and associates in the office are fun. Consultants are supported well with L&D teams, staffing teams

Cons

Cons: 1) Long hours: Consistently clocked >70 hrs/ week. Though weekends are protected, Sat is spent recovering/ grocery/ laundry and then by Sun eve--you are packing for an early AM flight on Monday. This makes you question the money you are making. If you making 1.7x the market rate, you are sorta working 1.5-1.8x hours as well. 2) Middle management (Senior Project Leaders/ Principals): Not everyone in middle management is a great people developer. I once worked for a senior Principal who would constantly fret about his promotion and how if he doesn't become a Partner soon, he'll have to leave. That made for a terrible case experience as he was so insecure and made everyone work long hours (unnecessarily) to deliver "value" 3) Up-or-out policy: BCG is aggressively pursuing the up-or-out policy. Every year size of incoming class gets bigger, but people start leaving after 12-14 months. All you need is 1-2 bad case experiences for the firm to make up its mind and force you to leave. This policy makes sense superficially, but it assumes that everyone develops at the same pace. At the same time, you do not need to be exceptionally smart to have a long career at BCG. BCG has a very peculiar work culture/ process, some people are able to adapt and some don't. If you have some industry/ real-life work experience, it may hinder your success at BCG as you may feel we are not answering the right questions or our work lacks technical detail. Most "successful" consultants at BCG joined the firm right out of undergrad and only have consulting expertise.

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5.0
Jul 2, 2026
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Pros

One of the best opportunities to accelerate career

Cons

High pressure environment and long hours

3.0
Jul 3, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
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Pros

Education on AI Fluency and access to the latest LLM models. My immediate team who energizes me.

Cons

BCG isn't what it used to be. Former CEO Rich Lesser cared about Innovation about deep IP and expertise, truly about unlocking the human potential that powers us. Current CEO and leadership trickles down commercialization message, everything is about metrics, what's the business impact, how many cases did this work touch, what is the trend. Often times appearing shortsighted. Lots of politics, lots of words, limited action from PA leadership, largely because they are unable to make a decision, going back and forth on priorities; Every MDP wanting to own something, with too many chefs in the kitchen, and not enough true clarity. Incentive metrics are broken, and asked to do more, An innovation unit is not recognized.

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