Pros
Huron has strong leaders who listen to employees and are willing to make changes when the business needs to realign. For a consulting organization, the culture is empathetic and supportive, and people generally care about doing right by each other. Work–life balance is largely what you make it. If you’re proactive about boundaries and expectations, it’s manageable. Career growth can also be fast for people who take ownership of their development, invest in learning, and build strong internal networks. You’re rewarded for initiative and follow-through. The firm is deeply client-focused, which means you work on real problems with real impact. You get exposure to senior stakeholders and meaningful responsibility earlier than at many companies.
Cons
Huron is not a software company, which is important context for anyone considering a product or technology role. The role hierarchies, operating model, and talent mix aren’t designed to support product development the way a traditional tech firm would. Engineering maturity is inconsistent, and there’s limited depth of senior product and platform engineering experience. The organization prioritizes client deliverables over R&D and long-term product investment, which makes true productization difficult. Timelines are often driven by client needs rather than what’s required to build scalable, high-quality software. For people coming from a tech-first environment, the constant context switching and consulting-driven pace can be frustrating.