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CrossCountry Consulting

Engaged Employer

Great People, Leadership, Culture and Growth Opportunities - Manager CrossCountry Consulting Employee Review

5.0
Jul 29, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The people...the people...the people! CrossCountry must hand-pick their employees; because they are all "humble rockstars", who enjoy challenging projects and collaboration. CrossCountry offers a unique blend of structure, leadership, development, and growth potential. I have worked at CrossCountry for several years and truly enjoy the challenge, growth opportunities, and most of all...the people!

Cons

I'd say growth! As you know growth presents challenges, hurdles, and some frustrations. I won't say it's a true "Con", but certainly brings new challenges and opportunities to "stretch" in order to keep up with the rapid growth pattern. The upside is...being part of a growing firm brings excitement, and lots of growth opportunities.

Explore other reviews about CrossCountry Consulting

5.0
Jun 26, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Working with clients and helping project teams complete their assignments. Good coordination with different departments. Knowledgeable and professional employees. Recognition for good work and opportunities to take on additional responsibilities.

Cons

Too much documentation and reporting on some projects

1.0
Jul 6, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Some colleagues demonstrated actual competence at their work.

Cons

• Senior staff controlled which people received high-profile assignments and advancement opportunities based on personal relationships rather than merit or performance • Colleagues outside the established inner circle were routinely overlooked for roles and projects while less experienced people with better connections moved ahead repeatedly • I brought relevant qualifications and took on difficult assignments, but my career progression stalled because I lacked the relationships that mattered for advancement • Career development conversations and advancement decisions happened without transparency or input from those being affected, determined entirely by people in charge • The organization made no effort to acknowledge the pattern of favoritism or implement systems that would ensure fair consideration for all employees

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