Looks Collegial from the Outside, Cutthroat on the Inside - Associate Kearney Employee Review

1.0
4 July 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Compensation is competitive. If you’re smart about saving, this can help buffer the rocky transition when you're eventually pushed out (which is more likely than not).

Cons

Up-or-Out Culture Disguised as Collegiality: Despite what leadership and recruiters will tell you, Kearney absolutely operates with an up-or-out model. Of the six associates who started with me, all six were gone within three years—and all but one not by choice. If you’re not actively being pushed out, reasons will be manufactured to make that happen. Toxic Internal Politics: On multiple occasions, I experienced (and heard from others about) inconsistent feedback that shifted 180 degrees when it came time for formal performance reviews. One principal in particular praised my work throughout the engagement, only to completely reverse course when evaluations came up. A peer later told me they experienced the exact same thing with this principal. This is not an isolated incident—political games are common, and leadership either can’t or won’t intervene. Sabotage and Withholding Information: On another project, a peer who was the sole point of contact with the principal purposely withheld deadlines from me—then used that to position me as underperforming. Blame Always Flows Downhill: When a client expressed dissatisfaction with our approach on a project, was the manager held accountable? Of course not. The blame landed squarely on the associate (me). Accountability is rarely aligned with actual responsibility. Lack of Real Training: Kearney claims to invest in developing consultants, but structured training is nearly nonexistent. Most teams are remote and disengaged from onboarding or supporting new joiners. You’re expected to learn through osmosis—if you’re lucky. False Advertising During Recruiting: I joined Kearney after pausing interviews at other firms, largely because I believed the story that they don’t follow a typical up-or-out model and that the culture was more supportive. That was a huge mistake. My experience proved otherwise, and I regret not continuing my search for a better fit.

Explore other reviews about Kearney

5.0
8 June 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The role helps build strong research, communication, and analytical skills.

Cons

Some tasks may also be repetitive depending on the project stage.

1.0
16 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

If you’re fresh out of school and don’t have a specific skill and don’t know what to do, and you’re willing to be a yes man then yes it might be a good place to figure out your next step.

Cons

- Lack of pipeline for certain practices (and they will blame that on you saying your utilization is low but there’s nothing you can do at an associate level) - Full of people that feel good about themselves but they actually knows nothing about how actual industry work - No talent - Management will give you vague feedback that you can’t act on, For example, I got asked to “elevate the deck” but when I asked is it the messaging or is it the format etc they can’t give me anything specific - The expectation on work quality is inconsistent - Some manager level people can’t do excel which is shocking - You need to be a people pleaser in order to get promoted

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