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Boston Consulting Group

Engaged Employer

Boston Consulting Group reviews

4.2

84% would recommend to a friend

(9,625 total reviews)
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Christoph Schweizer

87% approve of CEO

76% positive business outlook

Boston Consulting Group has an employee rating of 4.2 out of 5 stars, based on 9,625 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Boston Consulting Group employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Administración y consultoría industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

10K reviews
2.0
Aug 18, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- The friendships you make during your summer/first few years will last and last. It's like working with some of your best and smartest friends from college. - Very quick way to form perspectives about drivers of organizational dysfunction-- both internally and in client situations - Incredible alumni network that is very willing to provide advice when you reach out for career guidance. - Tremendous (and often underappreciated) health benefits and profit sharing plan. - You will learn very fast about the BCG approach to casework (or you won't be there very long), which, on average, is a great approach to solving problems and creating competitive advantage for any type of business in any industry. - Lifelong access to BCG Career Services department.

Cons

- No matter what the recruiters say about it being a flat meritocracy, office partners must know and like you for promotion to occur. If you are staffed on projects with no local partner presence, this will hurt you during reviews when you are weighed against peers who have more local partner visibility. Weigh the partners and the indutries in which they practice when deciding which office(s) to prioritize on your application. This reality is especially difficult to manage, given the vagaries of the staffing model (timing and business needs driven at the entry level MUCH more than personal preference driven) and the generalist model of consulting. Try to specialize early and form bonds with strong partners. - Apprenticeship model is best represented, if at all, through interactions with your more-experienced peer group. Do not count on material amounts of guidance from partners. Training sessions are content poor, are typically too high-level, and come across as refashioned pitches to clients rather than an intentional educational curriculum. Otherwise, training depends upon the devotion of the associates to helping other associates and first-year consultants. Knowledge transfer very poorly orchestrated and much unneeded reinvention occurs during cases, which often leads to avoidable late nights. - Despite BCG's claims that it values a diversity of backgrounds, consultants with pre-MBA consulting experience typically fare relatively well. This can be due to the fact that you are expected to hit the ground running. A couple slip ups are tolerated, but one can become marked very quickly. The performance review and partner's opinion of you on your first case is extremely important for setting your trajectory and longevity with the firm. - Be prepared for sponsored associates returning from business school to receive favored staffing status, international opportunities, internal leadership opportunities, etc., which can lead to Orwellian double standards. - Do not be fooled-- it is a partnership for the benefit of the partners. In addition to normal up-or-out policies, stealth layoffs have been relatively common during this downturn. - Murky, black-box performance review process-- be wary when more senior people tell you how transparent and fair it is. They represent survivorship bias and are often politically motivated. The partners in an office will always be able to justify any decision they want. When push comes to shove, no one will be willing to go to the mat for you. - Managing internal politics and partners typically much more difficult than providing value to clients. Inverted pyramid is not uncommon on cases, which makes it difficult to manage competing priorities with unnecessary level of resources. Multiple partners on cases also often leads to poorly defined scope of case from the outset. - Despite a one-case model, multiple partners (each with his/her own perspective and priorities)on same case make it feel like you are working on multiples cases - Lack of personal/family life goes without saying. Do not expect any balance if you want to succeed and have frank discussion with your spouse/significant other prior to accepting full-time offer.

3.0
Jul 17, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Excellent benefits package including top notch health insurance and free money into your retirement account. Additionally, compensation at BCG (and the rest of the consulting industry) isn't too shabby. . .although it is no ibanking, the money isn't bad. Additionally, the exit opportunities at BCG are pretty vast, especially out of undergrad. An associate (the entry-level position) can stay at the firm and be promoted, go to business school and have it paid for by the firm, transfer to an international office or explore opportunities in an entirely different industry with the BCG brand available to be leveraged into, at the very least, an interview.

Cons

The biggest problem with BCG is the misalignment between the recuriting message and the reality of the job. During recruiting, BCG is sold as a strategy shop in which associates will be dictating to CEOs of Fortune 500 companies and making decisions that affect the face of global commerce. In reality, there are a lot of problems at BCG that I think stem from the fact that it is a client services job. There is overscoping which leads to unneccesary work (and late nights). There is iteration after useless iteration on output and wordsmithing. There is the desire to constantly over-deliver to the client while properly messaging and avoiding telling the client what it doesn't want to hear. Overall, BCG is moving further and further away from strategy and closer and closer towards a process-based firm because, frankly, there is a lot more money in process work. That means more post-merger integrations, delayerings, cost reductions and implementation projects (which are boring, tedious and contentious) and less strategy projects in which we help define the path and future of organizations.

1.0
Aug 28, 2025

Where mental health goes to die

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Benefits, free food, events hybrid

Cons

Management, workload, management, office politics, management, lack of proper training, management, raises, micromanagement, management

Viewing 64 - 66 of 9,625 Reviews

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