Since it’s consulting, certain cons are inevitable (hours, demanding clients, tedious work), so I’ll focus here on A|S-specific realities I wish I had known before accepting the offer.
- Prestige. It pains me to list this as the top ‘con,’ but honestly, it can be a bit annoying when none of your classmates/friends/family, and many recruiters, have not heard of your firm. This can be a barrier in certain types of recruiting (e.g., some PE firms will only take MBB consultants; some corporate recruiters won’t want a TMT-specific consultant for more general roles). In general, A|S thinks of itself as on par with MBB in terms of comp, level of intellect/client work, and strategic focus of projects. This may be true in the sense that, we do work for top tier PE funds and F100 corporations. However, at the end of the day, other firms have the ears of C-Suite executives at the F100, and A|S just doesn’t. You’re unlikely to interact with clients higher than Sr. Manager or VP at F100 companies. When it comes to elite level consulting, we just can't compete with the MBB brand. Another metric of this would be social following. For a company with ~1/100th the revenue of an MBB, we have ~1/10,000th the social media following. Our brand is just pretty week.
- Project tedium. After a few years, consulting always gets a little boring—firms ‘add value’ by doing projects they’ve done before, so this is unavoidable to some extent. However, this problem is exacerbated at a TMT-focused firm, where the likelihood of working on 5 consecutive SaaS market size analyses for 5 different PE firms is not unlikely.
- “Quantitative focus.” This is one of the firm’s favorite selling points—that we do quant heavy work. In reality what this means is, we sell projects that require a nauseating amount of data processing, interpretation, and analysis, typically in conjunction with our in-house data scientists/data engineers. It also means many of our projects involve excruciatingly granular geographic analysis, e.g. predicting business spend on some technology for every census block in the United States. I have spent a lot more time than I would like to, as a consultant, trying to write a SQL query, waiting for some massive csv to open, or googling Tableau tutorials, than will ever be useful to me in my life. I know this is where the industry is headed generally (companies keep track of more data —> require more consultants to process), but I personally find it unappetizing work. Others may feel differently, e.g. if you have a data science background.
- Hours. Standard for consulting, but just to give some color—hours have improved a lot over the years. In my experience, 80% of weeks are 55-65 hours (so, ~9am to ~9-11pm M-Th, maybe ~9-5 on Fridays, zero weekend hours), and 10% are more, 10% less. There are people at A|S who work 70+ hour weeks, but that’s either a personal choice (they’re grinding to get promoted early), a one-off egregiously demanding client, or personal inefficiency/wheel-spinning. I've never worked a weekend.
- Diversity. Look, the firm is making extraordinary efforts to hire senior women and people of color, but are generally struggling. This is not the forum to dissect reasons for this, but if having diverse senior-level mentorship is important to you, look elsewhere. That said, the firm is quite diverse from the ~manager level downwards, at least compared to the industry generally. Also to the firm’s credit, they are pouring an extraordinary number of resources into diversity programs - speaker series, workshops, panels, etc etc.
- Unnecessary leveling. With the merger, we’ve added an extra ‘level,’ so there are now 7 levels from Analyst to Partner. Compared to how MBB does leveling, this seems unnecessary, more like a way of dragging out the promotion process with smaller, less meaningful milestones along the way, but I'm hardly an expert here.
- Lack of extracurricular programming. I don’t know the exact word for this, but A|S has very few options for secondments like MBB or others have, and given it’s a smaller firm, a bit less social inertia (e.g. if the firm joins a local kickball tournament, you’ll be lucky if 3 people show up).