It's a Job, Not a Career - Project Manager CapTech Employee Review

1.0
Mar 3, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Decent benefits - Decent pay - Charlotte office is nice

Cons

- The office environment is nice but you will sit in a cramped picnic table environment where you have no personal space. The offices are reserved for the popular crowd (aka "leaders" @ CapTech) - Marketing hype and external brand portrayals of the company have no reflection on the reality inside - Client work is not valued, internal "relationship building" is. You can be exceptional consulting for your client, and even lauded by them. Yet you will not go far at CapTech unless you are connected to the right leader and focus on that relationship. Client reviews are never conducted, as an example of the fact that there is no value held on their perspective of your performance. - Promotions are subjective, popularity based, and political. The reason these keep coming up in Glassdoor reviews is because it is so rampant and frustrating. The Charlotte office is one of the largest and has a very low promotion rate. Of those that are promoted it's typical a "popular buddy" of a "leader" who is on their third promotion in two years. Meanwhile employees with 3+ years of tenure that deliver excellent work for their client sit in limbo trying to navigate an ever moving target of criteria to move to the next level. - Anyone of the leaders in the Charlotte office would not make it past the interview process of any of the Big 4. If you work with one of them you will quickly notice novice mistakes that you would never see even at the Manager level of the Big 4, yet at CapTech they are Directors and above running projects. - As others have mentioned, it's like a Frat House or High School. Popular cliques are in charge and make all of the key decisions affecting lives and careers around them. This equates to talented people being underutilized and eventually leaving as they have consistently been passed over for opportunities, promotions, or are just tired of the environment. - HR is laughable in that complaints and concerns raised to them go absolutely nowhere.

avatar
CapTech Response
6y
Thank you for taking the time to leave us your review. We take every piece of feedback seriously and appreciate your honesty in sharing your concerns. We are sorry to hear the frustrations you are experiencing. We are actively working to ensure we have the appropriate office accommodations for all CapTechers. We are also working on clarifying the skills path and promotion process; but in the meantime, please don’t hesitate to reach out with any questions you have surrounding this process. Excellent client work is always valued, along with the relationships you build both internally and externally. We’re sorry to hear your lack of confidence you feel in CapTech’s leadership. I encourage you to please reach out to me so we can address your concerns specifically and take any appropriate actions - Katy Apostolides, HR Director

Explore other reviews about CapTech

5.0
Jan 29, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Every team I worked on was flexible reliable and knowledgeable. Great coach to coachee system in place and tons of opportunities for professional development.

Cons

Bench time can be a little anxiety inducing.

avatar
CapTech Response
4mo
We appreciate everything you do for CapTech, and I'm glad your experience has been a positive one. We want everyone to feel supported as they grow and develop in new ways. I agree that the transition between clients can be stressful, and we recognize the importance of communication, support and engagement during these periods of change. Our weekly bench calls and open-door culture are two ways team members on the bench can connect and learn how to stay connected between clients. -Katy Apostolides, Managing Director - HR
3.0
Apr 10, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

CapTech’s biggest strength is its people. The culture is genuinely collaborative, which stands out in consulting where internal competition is often the norm. Teams work well together, knowledge sharing is encouraged, and there’s real space for entrepreneurship and innovation. The firm has also shown an ability to stay financially stable through uncertain times like COVID by taking creative measures to adapt. CapTech has embraced AI proficiency very well. They procured an internal certification program, created a learning path to get consultants comfortable and confident using AI tooling, and worked with clients to inject AI solutioning - even for clients not ready for it. It's pretty impressive to see how much success CapTech has had by understanding the impact of AI in consulting.

Cons

Leadership communication lacks transparency, particularly around decisions that materially impact employees. For example, the shift to unlimited PTO was positioned as a benefit aligned with industry standards, while downplaying the more meaningful financial implication that PTO accrual payouts were eliminated. That kind of decision would have been better received with straightforward, honest context about economic pressures. The consultant feedback process is also flawed. While there have been multiple attempts to improve it (SBIC templates, start/stop, incremental check ins), peer feedback trends overwhelmingly positive and often does not reflect actual performance. This creates challenges for staffing decisions and limits meaningful professional growth. There also appears to be a lack of alignment at the executive level. Decisions often feel consensus-driven rather than structured and decisive, which impacts clarity of direction. There is also a recurring disconnect between what is sold and what can actually be delivered. The MC practice and SI are routinely not aligned on scope, feasibility, or level of effort. This creates avoidable friction once delivery begins, puts unnecessary pressure on project teams, and can erode client trust when expectations have to be reset mid-engagement. On one project, it was hard to hear our client share that, "You guys need to fix the problem you created!" Trust in leadership is an issue. Many employees question whether leadership can scale the company effectively, and there is a growing perception that the firm is drifting toward a staff augmentation model rather than differentiated or "boutique" consulting.

2
avatar
CapTech Response
2mo
Thank you for taking the time to share such thoughtful and detailed feedback. We’re proud that our people, collaborative culture, and continued investment in areas like AI have stood out positively. We also appreciate the candid perspectives on transparency, feedback, executive alignment, and delivery execution—these are areas we are actively and continually working to improve, and input like this helps inform those efforts. We remain committed to clearer communication, stronger alignment across practices, and ensuring we deliver on the differentiated consulting experience our employees and clients expect. Thank you for your years of helping CapTech be a best place to work. -Katy Apostolides, Managing Director - HR
See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All