Consulting 9-5 Gig

I'm looking to break into consulting from finance (burn out), and I'm wondering what you consider to be the "creme de la creme" of work/life balance consulting jobs & why?

Also, perhaps you can help me define the consulting service line that fits my preferences:

Client facing &

1) not so much insane excel work

2) not so much client report writing

3) not so stressful

4) not so many hours

5) not IT related

I figure, a line of work similar to those chilled out consulting gigs you hear about from bored consultants of reddit.


Thank you!

 
Most Helpful

Creme de la Creme in consulting world is considered MBB. McKinsey, BCG, Bain are these firms, and they mostly do management (strategic) consulting. However, job involves excel with long stressful hours. Then comes, tier 2 magement consulting firms (Oliver Wymen, Strategy&, Roland Berger). About hours and stress I don't know but I guess they same or close to MBB. Then, there are tech consulting firms such as, Accenture and IBM. But you are not interested in IT. There are also Big 4 firms (KPMG, EY, PwC, Deloitte). They do a lot of things starting from implementation, audit, risk, IT, deals etc. They also have long hours. Additionally, there are strategy/business development arms within large corporations. I guess, the less stress and short hours are there. About small consulting firms and freelance consulting I don't know much.To conclude, consulting is in the professional services industry alongside with IB and Law. And professional services despite considered "prestigious", paying well, and havin good exit opts, are stressful and have long hours.

 

Helpful, thank you!

I think CorpStrat will be hard to pull off because they often hire Ex-MBB and usually require an MBA upon entry (besides for their undergrad hires)...

But you think I'd perhaps enjoy working for a small consulting firm or a consulting arm of a small-medium accounting firm? Or maybe there's a specific group within one of the larger firms that delegates less intense projects/work...

Yeah, I'm hoping for a role in consulting that would be a close equivalent to commercial banking (hours 9-5, comp 85k all-in as an A1).

 

This. From what I've gathered in the consulting world, you can basically pick two of the following three:

-Interesting work

-Reasonable WLB

-Good comp

MBB/Tier 2 is likely interesting work and good comp (great comp realistically), but at the expense of WLB. Big 4 non-strategy + Analytics is probably more aligned to Reasonable WLB + Good comp, but you'll likely be working on more boring/non-value add work, which is why the WLB is better (if it isn't mission-critical or time-sensitive to the client, you're less likely to be on-call or working crazy hours to meet a deadline).

 

Quite a few threads on federal consulting I'd take a look at them.

Really depends on the level / complexity of analytics you're talking about. Simple data analytics is doable with a few months of dedicated self study, but more data science roles are going to take longer and some might even require an advanced degree. Tbh I'd rather do analytics at an actual company instead of at a consulting firm.

 

Look into Deloitte GPS. I think base is 82k plus bonus. The make less than other Deloitte consultants but because you're working for the government you basically only work 40 hours a week. Heard it's a relatively chill job. You'd have to live in DC though

 

I'll take a contrarian point of view. 

Even though the service industry and consulting in general has been known for long hours, there is a good amount of variance in this aspect. For instance, if you worked at Bain and exclusively handled Private Equity Due Diligences, you're looking at 70-80 hour work weeks, however, if you focused more strategy and operations engagements, the hours would decline to 50-60 hours and at best, 40-50 hours for simple companies/clients. 

I also know several consultants who have slowed their career progression in exchange for better work-life balance by asking for clients or groups known to have less stressful work (such as operations consulting clients with a large internal expertise existing) and turning down work or engagements that may have greatly accelerated their careers. I recall a mentor of mine saying that everyone will exploit you if you give them the chance to. He said that new hires and analysts rarely say no to assignments or engagements which leads to, to some extent, unnecessarily longer hours. These people work at 2nd tier consulting firms and work 40-45 hour work weeks 70% of the time. They accept the downside of slower progression/lower long-term salary. In exchange, they get to leave the office and enjoy their evenings. Obviously, there are unavoidable long hours and times where you can't say no, but there are ways to minimize the longer hours. 

All this to say: it does exist, but it's not easy to achieve immediately. 

 

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