Capco reviews

3.8

75% would recommend to a friend

(3,433 total reviews)
avatar

Anne-Marie Rowland

81% approve of CEO

65% positive business outlook

Capco has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 3,433 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Capco employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Management et conseil aux entreprises industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

3K reviews
1.0
Nov 21, 2014

Bodyshop 2.0

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Some genuinely great people to work with and hang out with on projects and outside of the office - Partners (at least some of them) are trying to be approachable and create a supportive environment - Office benefits if you should ever be in the NY office. As other reviewers said fresh fruit, food, coffee abound in addition to some rather ridiculous benefits (massages, etc - what is this, Google?). If not, too bad, no benefits for you, ever - Some interesting projects to work on, but this is as likely as winning the lottery

Cons

Where to begin, there are almost too many to list here: What was once a focused boutique consulting firm with deep expertise has morphed into a worse-run Accenture bodyshop. Kiss goodbye to any challenging and insightful projects, hello bodyshop! You're being sold strategy consulting and innovation while in fact you'll be working on PMO and back office operations projects forever. Little to no room to grow professionally or develop any meaningful industry skills. But not to worry, you're only expected to produce status reports, so as long as you're at Capco you have nothing to worry about. Projects are being managed by throwing bodies at the problem and hoping that something useful will come out of it rather than having a plan. Lip service being paid to innovation. Yes there's Digital. No they don't create any cutting-edge solutions in IT or Banking. It's a disguised graphics department that pretends to add value to clients while preparing expensive decks with funkier colors and weird layouts. Nothing that your Kinko's (or 2nd year Art & Design student) couldn't do. It's a gag and a marketing tool, nothing more. Training is a non-existent and the company should be ashamed of pretending to have a “Learning and Development” department. Once you’re in, you’ll be expected to attend some cookie-cutter trainings that teach you no industry skills whatsoever. Doesn’t matter though, since you’re only expected to work on back office paper pushing, there’s little training that is needed. Thinking of actually learning about financial services, technology, capital markets, banking, risk? Sure, just attend one of the many training sessions on a Friday afternoon - developed by some mid-level consultants with too much time on the bench - that’ll surely teach you the hard skills required to get ahead in your career! Huge turnover at the company as a whole and HR in particular. If your HR departments becomes a revolving door and your consultants jump ship en masse as soon as promotions are announced or the insignificant bonus is paid out, you’ve got issues far deeper than you think Try and ask why positive feedback by on this website consists of 5-star reviews clustered within 1 or 2 days of each other while other feedback is more evenly distributed. Random coincidence or concerted drive to vote up the disappointing company ratings? I leave it up to you to decide.

5.0
Nov 21, 2014

Excellent company to work for

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The interview process was very quick and efficient. I have been with Capco for just under a year now and the work environment is great. There is high visibility with management and hard work does not go unnoticed.

Cons

I have not had any negative experiences to this point.

1.0
Nov 20, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Some genuinely great people to work with and hang out with on projects and outside of the office - Partners (at least some of them) are trying to be approachable and create a supportive environment - Office benefits if you should ever be in the NY office. As other reviewers said fresh fruit, food, coffee abound in addition to some rather ridiculous benefits (massages, etc - what is this, Google?). If not, too bad, no benefits for you, ever - Some interesting projects to work on, but this is as likely as winning the lottery

Cons

Where to begin, there are almost too many to list here: What was once a focused boutique consulting firm with deep expertise has morphed into a worse-run Accenture bodyshop. Kiss goodbye to any challenging and insightful projects, hello bodyshop! You're being sold strategy consulting and innovation while in fact you'll be working on PMO and back office operations projects forever. Little to no room to grow professionally or develop any meaningful industry skills. But not to worry, you're only expected to produce status reports, so as long as you're at Capco you have nothing to worry about. Projects are being managed by throwing bodies at the problem and hoping that something useful will come out of it rather than having a plan. Lip service being paid to innovation. Yes there's Capco Digital. No they don't create any cutting-edge solutions in IT or Banking. It's a disguised graphics department that pretends to add value to clients while preparing expensive decks with funkier colors and weird layouts. Nothing that your Kinko's (or 2nd year Art & Design student) couldn't do. It's a gag and a marketing tool, nothing more. Training is a full-blown joke and the company should be ashamed of pretending a three person team (two of which are under 27) for over 700 consultants even deserves to be called a “Learning and Development” department. Once you’re in, you’ll be expected to attend some cookie-cutter trainings that teach you no industry skills whatsoever. Doesn’t matter though, since you’re only expected to work on back office paper pushing, there’s little training that is needed. Thinking of actually learning about financial services, technology, capital markets, banking, risk? Sure, just attend one of the many 2h training sessions on a Friday afternoon - developed by some Senior Consultants with too much time on the bench - that’ll surely teach you the hard skills required to get ahead in your career! Ridiculous turnover at the company as a whole and HR in particular. If your HR departments becomes a revolving door and your consultants jump ship en masse as soon as promotions are announced or the measly bonus is paid out, you’ve got issues far deeper than you think

Viewing 3253 - 3255 of 3,433 Reviews

Glassdoor has 4,194 Capco reviews submitted anonymously by Capco employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Capco is right for you.