Booz Allen Hamilton reviews

3.9

74% would recommend to a friend

(10,421 total reviews)
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Horacio D. Rozanski

79% approve of CEO

55% positive business outlook

Booz Allen Hamilton has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 10,421 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Booz Allen Hamilton employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

10K reviews
4.0
Sep 18, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You felt like you were one of the elite; working for one of the best companies in the market, a company that was very selective about who it hired. The compensation was fair. The benefits were awesome - especially the 401K and training. Leadership knew you and you knew leadership. Career development was the mantra for taking care of staff. The annual assessments were constructive and critical; there might be some hard pills to swallow in the debrief but the information was typically spot-on and was meant to help you grow as a professional.

Cons

Seemed as if climbing the ladder above Senior Associate required someone to retire, die, and/or have testicles - and it required breakfast, lunch, and dinner meetings on a regular basis to "socialize" your career progression. Many of the social events included drinking or golf - what if you didn't like those? They did have a part time track for work-life balance, but that usually meant earning 75% of your prior pay for the ability to answer emails and requests from home and your workload didn't seem to diminish. I fault the very senior leadership for selling out to Carlyle and ruining what had been a great company. Principals and Senior Associates asked if they could buy company stock to help raise money for the "Booz & Company" folks who wanted out of Booz Allen Hamilton and we were told NO. Bad decision.

1.0
Jun 24, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Pay, time off, and benefits are good but not great. Coworkers tend to be smart, capable, and dedicated. Depends on your project but contemporary tech, software, and tools are used.

Cons

Offered a Dream Job. Instead spent months on The Bench. I am disgusted that I could be offered employment after one 30-minute interview but never told there would be a second far more arduous search to find an actual project. My offer letter stated I’d be employed as a software developer supporting an intelligence agency. I was never offered that work. Instead I was told to take the first project I was offered regardless of its alignment with my skillset, career goals, or location and that if I didn’t like it I'd be allowed to look for something else after 9 months. Oh and if I left the firm within 18 months I'd have to repay the training cost ($5K). My experience wasn’t unique. I was hired through one of the Tech Excellence programs along with ~10 others. Our first month was a 4-week training course. A month after the course ended, 4 people had been assigned projects. The rest of us were instructed to apply to project openings on workday, i.e. find a job (wait what?). And our applications were for the most part completely ignored. BAH’s recruiters and hiring managers completely ignoring their coworker’s applications and messages is indefensible. If you don’t have an SCI clearance don’t bother trying to be a Data Scientist here. Avoid the “Tech Excellence Programs”. They are a bait-and-switch. You’re a number they can use to bid on proposals.

1.0
Mar 28, 2018

The Bench? What?

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The compensation level for an Associate is on par with market value. As a software developer, I was rewarded in terms of compensation, workplace accessories (Macbook Pro), etc. I enjoyed using enterprise GitHub, Slack, Atlassian products such as JIRA, Amazon Web Services, Azure, and others. There is also flexibility to WFH if you are on the "bench" or if your project allows for it. Lastly, the location of your hub is typically pretty reasonable in relation to where you live, so commuting while on the bench or working remote is typically not a problem.

Cons

I was lured into this position because I was told there was an abundance of work in my hub and that commuting inside the beltway or into NoVA was not going to be a problem. I asked a ton of questions during the interview process about projects, work-life balance, client locations, etc. and the answer was always "depends". Once I got to the firm, I realized day one that you're more or less just a number they use to bid on proposals. The "bench" is where you are when you don't have work. I was hired with about 10-12 other employees who all rode the bench between two to eight months without work. As "capability" hires, you come into the firm without work. It's your responsibility to apply to two jobs per day, and interview as much as possible. You are encouraged to apply to positions even if you only hit 35% of the basic qualifications. As a developer, you are also required to perform technical interviews, mostly whiteboard or technical algorithm solving. Imagine this, you wear your suit and tie to the BAH interview, you get the job and then you find out you don't actually have a job... but you have to apply to two jobs per day, the location might be 30 miles and hours of traffic to get to, and you might not even want it... on top of that, you have to interview AGAIN and AGAIN until you find something. If you are offered the position, and it's a "billable" project, you will be strongly encouraged to take it, even if you don't want to. The recruiters don't describe this to you during the interview process, even if you ask the right questions.

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Glassdoor has 11,052 Booz Allen Hamilton reviews submitted anonymously by Booz Allen Hamilton employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Booz Allen Hamilton is right for you.