If you want that promotion, remember who you work for. - Associate Booz Allen Hamilton Employee Review

4.0
Jun 26, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Fair pay, reasonable benefits. Company's well known reputation will carry for years on inertia. There is still a percentage of employees with considerable experience among the real core of the company: the Associate level.

Cons

Going public benefited a select few, but obviously not the rank and file employees. As a result of the demand for profit, a promotion to Lead Associate is a stress nightmare. The hypocrisy of ethics and core values is tough to repeatedly swallow over time, but to be fair - that is just about every company and government agency in America. Company networking is valued over client delivery. That kills contracts over a period of five years as inexperienced personnel are maneuvered into positions they should not fill. Lesson learned the hard way: do not, do not speak truth to power. Ever.

Explore other reviews about Booz Allen Hamilton

5.0
May 16, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great benefits and work culture. A lot of great opportunities to network and grow in your career.

Cons

Typical consulting work type stuff. All the extra non-paid internal firm work you have to do to get noticed and promoted. It can also be difficult to find a project that aligns with your career interests and aspirations leaving you to work with a client or on a project that’s less than ideal (e.g., super demanding client, very monotonous tasking with little opportunity to grow, etc.) Since Booz Allen mainly deals with federal clients, you’re also susceptible to project funding cuts and company layoffs do to current political climate (e.g., government shutdown, idiotic DODGE cuts, etc.)

1
3.0
Jun 8, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Strong mission-focused culture with meaningful work supporting national security missions. Great exposure to diverse projects, talented teammates, flexible work arrangements, and opportunities to develop skills across security, intelligence, cyber, and consulting. Benefits and professional development resources are solid.

Cons

The company culture and employee experience have changed significantly in recent years. Earlier years felt more mission-focused and employee-centered, while recent organizational shifts, government spending pressures, and increased emphasis on becoming a technology-focused company have created uncertainty for some employees. Frequent changes in priorities, restructuring, and business decisions can make job stability feel less predictable. Employees may sometimes feel disconnected from leadership, and concerns raised through HR or management channels do not always appear to result in meaningful action or transparency.

1
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