A good name to have on your resume - Senior Associate Booz Allen Hamilton Employee Review

2.0
May 10, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Lots of challenges Some great people -- and lots of very smart people If you can survive here and get promoted, you can succeed anywhere

Cons

- Very poor leadership overall -- leaders are concerned with how you make them look good - Very poor communications in the last couple of years -- no internal management of issues that affect employee morale and loyalty. HR has become a self-service effort. Try and ask a question! - Recent spate of layoffs/firings has created a lot of tension around the firm -- and no one senior seems to care. Many of those let go had not been given any indication that they were not meeting expectations. 30 principals and about 50 senior associates is about the right number. A lot of folks have performance improvement plans which are just delayed terminations. - Partners are just as worried about their career survival as the rest of the staff -- so they have little time to dedicate to doing the right thing -- which used to be the firm's mantra - The push to go public seems to have a lot of downsides in a firm that used to do a much better job taking care of its people -- which are, after all, its major resource.

Explore other reviews about Booz Allen Hamilton

5.0
Apr 9, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

They treat their people well

Cons

Pay isn't the highest at Booz

2.0
Jul 14, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

**Communications Specialist (Former Employee) – Booz Allen Hamilton** Overall, Booz Allen was a solid place to work, particularly if you're interested in supporting meaningful government missions. I worked as a Communications Specialist supporting federal clients, and the work was intellectually engaging. The role offered opportunities to develop executive communications, strategic messaging, and communications products on complex policy and technology issues. The company has talented people and a collaborative culture. I found my colleagues to be knowledgeable, supportive, and genuinely committed to delivering high-quality work for clients. There are also opportunities to build skills across communications, proposal support, change management, and stakeholder engagement if you're proactive. Like many consulting firms, however, your experience depends heavily on your client and contract. Workload and expectations can vary significantly from one engagement to another, and priorities can shift quickly based on client needs. Success requires adaptability, strong writing skills, and the ability to manage multiple competing deadlines. **Pros** * Smart, collaborative colleagues * Interesting and mission-driven client work * Opportunities to build a diverse communications portfolio * Strong reputation in the federal consulting space * Flexible career paths depending on contracts **Cons** * Experience varies considerably by client and manager * Fast-paced environment with shifting priorities * Advancement can depend on finding the right opportunities and contracts * Work-life balance fluctuates based on client demands **Advice to Management** Continue investing in career development for communications professionals and provide greater transparency around internal mobility and long-term career progression across contracts.

Cons

Career growth can be inconsistent because it's often tied to contract opportunities rather than individual performance. Your experience depends heavily on the client, project, and direct manager, so there isn't a consistent employee experience across the company. Internal processes and approvals can be bureaucratic, making even simple decisions take longer than necessary.

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