Boston Consulting Group reviews

4.2

84% would recommend to a friend

(9,601 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 9,601 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Boston Consulting Group employee rating is 22% above average for employers within the Management & Consulting industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

10K reviews
1.0
Jan 8, 2020

Toxic work environment - stay away

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I've been working in multiple BCG offices across continents and really liked the company for the exciting projects, interesting colleagues, etc.. Until I've decided to give the DC office a go. Horrible mistake.

Cons

The culture I experienced in the DC office was so toxic that I did not recognize the BCG I knew. Some examples: 1) On my second project, a junior team member made fun of a colleague with mental health issues. When I spoke up against her remarks, emphasizing that a surprising number of colleagues - including "successful consultants" - suffer from mental health issues, the rest of the team (all from the DC office and including more senior members) reacted negatively. They in fact tacitly supported the junior team member and her remarks - which became evident when the same junior member received a MBA Sponsorship a couple weeks after this incident. 2) The career development advisors I've met (which are of utmost importance to your BCG career) showed truly toxic behavior. During performance reviews, I've heard things like "Your opinion does not matter" or "we trust our local associates more than people like you". This behavior from CDAs (a relationship that builds on exchanging opinions and impressions openly) would have been absolutely unacceptable in any other BCG office I've seen. 3) Programs to enhance people's work-life-balance get advertised over and over, but management does its utmost to prevent people from actually using these. A close friend of mine tried to use "Time 4 you" (a program where employees are supposed to get unpaid vacation very easily) as her mother was terminally ill. Even though there were no clear business reasons (say, an ongoing project she was on and couldn't be replaced), the firm built up considerable pressure (e.g.her CDA calling, asking to "consider her career") to prevent her taking this time off. Given the context at hand, this behavior was a text-book case of bullying. 4) Compared to other offices, I did not find a single senior role model in the DC office - quite the contrary. One example is how our team got "burned" on a low-prospect proposal, with the partner letting us work until after midnight. On Valentine's Day, we - against previous agreements to the contrary - had to crank out slides without real urgency until 9pm, before the partner let us leave, saying "I understand that some people have a private life and this day is important to them". It became clear to me that Mid-level colleagues (Project Leaders and Principals) get groomed to fit into this culture - turning "nice people" to cynical "slave drivers" in a matter of a few years.

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Boston Consulting Group Response
6y
Thank you for your feedback. We take your comments very seriously and would therefore be happy to discuss further with you directly. If you are open to it, please reach out to BCG Washington D.C. HR at washr@bcg.com.
1.0
Mar 13, 2017

Overrated

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

LOTS of free food, and again more food and great parties and diners at the expense of very generous (dumb?) clients (or maybe they have no idea where their $ go?). Great salary (although if you do the math by the hour you may not find it so attractive). Great benefits . Great learning and development options. You will meet some really smart (and arrogant) people; this will give you a chance to build a network for the future.

Cons

The cons exceed by far the pros in my opinion. If you want to be part of an organization that values arrogance over knowledge, gossip and constant subjective evaluation over team group, and true organic added value, if you are a Trump fan and wish to be part of a group that admires and provides support to the Trump administration (CEO, Rich Lesser is a enthusiast) , if you want to be part of a white boys’ club that does not promote diversity (besides what they advertise there is almost no minority that reach the partnership level) then yes, this is the right “club” to join.

2.0
Oct 6, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-great benefits and pay, esteemed firm -backbone of company culture is a hard work ethic -more good people than bad

Cons

the pros couldn't outweigh the cons: you don't have autonomy in the role at BCG, you have to report to your manager who microanalyses you (they have eyes into your email in all regards) and micromanages you on outlook. An EA for BCG is not for the faint of heart because the nature of the company requires that you preform with the highest marks-No problem. However, there is a problem when the manger watches your screen and has tiny issues with how you have your inbox sorted, how you didn't use a short cut she told you to create even though this short cut may be for something as small as changing your font size. ALSO very important to know about working on the BST (business services team) side of BCG is that the BST side and the consulting side practically feel like two different companies. You rarely see your executive (maybe a couple times a month) and you are not expected to interact with the consultants. One quickly learns at BCG that the two sides do not mingle much and it is not fondly looked upon if you do. Altogether, survival at BCG felt like high school drama appealing to the other girls needs on the admin team, as opposed to the executives needs. Because the two parts of the company are so separate, the executives typically don't have much say in choosing their assistants. You end up signed up in a role much different than the common EA role.

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