It's consulting. Excellent Academic Transition, but billable hours creates cutthroat culture
Pros
Exponent offers an outstanding bridge from academia to consulting, serving as an ideal entry point for PhDs and scientists looking to leverage their technical expertise in the private sector. The company maintains deep technical expertise with strong talent across specialized engineering disciplines and technologies. It provides valuable skill development as an excellent training ground for customer service, business development, and client management skills that academics typically lack. The high bill rates also create a premium brand positioning in specialized consulting areas, establishing the firm in a distinct niche market.
Cons
The company's unhealthy obsession with billable hours means that revenue metrics drive behavior toward maximizing hours rather than pursuing intellectual challenge or quality of work. This incentivizes consultants to spend time on mundane but lucrative tasks simply because they generate revenue. There's significant confusion around unclear credit allocation, with ambiguous rules about client ownership and credit-sharing creating internal competition and politics. It's especially unclear whether senior consultants or junior associates should get opportunities when clients reach out to multiple people simultaneously. The poorly defined promotion criteria stem from a lack of transparent framework for advancement based on client acquisition and revenue metrics, leading to widespread confusion and frustration. This has contributed to an intense internal competition where the "dog-eat-dog" culture has driven away top-performing, long-tenured consultants who were also among the highest earners. As a public company, there's constant pressure to increase rates year-over-year, creating unsustainable bill rate inflation that's pricing the firm out of competitive markets and limiting available work. Consultants from academic backgrounds also struggle with the difficult cultural adjustment, particularly lacking the soft skills required for managing attorney clients without adequate support or training.