Red Flag #1: The Premise
Expecting Capco to be a traditional management consultancy? you will be disappointed. Accept them for what they are - a body shop or glorified recruitment consultants - then at least you won’t be blindsided. Your exciting consulting career? Think less "strategic advisory" and more "PM or BA for hire," where you’re just another sheep to be milked and wooled. Almost every client insists on interviewing you first - something Capco conveniently forgets to mention during hiring. And here’s a fun fact: when a client demands interviews, it’s usually because they don’t trust the firm sending you-aka a body shop.
Red Flag #2: The fine art of scapegoating
Capco’s client extension strategy comes in two flavours:
a) Push employees into out-of-scope work to keep the contract alive-then blame them when it falls apart.
b)Pressure consultants to wring projects and force placements at client sites - all while keeping a handy list of scapegoats. They even take the liberty of "enhancing" your CV themselves !
Scapegoating has been turned into an art form: find an easy target (or someone inconveniently asking the right questions), then toss them under the bus without a second thought. Lesson - Document everything.
Red Flag #3: Expertise? Nah, Google exists!
For a firm serving financial services, it’s strange how few actually come from financial services. The recruitment process prioritises consulting experience over real industry knowledge, so while they’re fluent in consulting jargon, the actual workings of financial services? Not so much. Hence Google rules. Naturally, when clients push back, they’re labeled "difficult" rather than simply experienced or knowledgeable. My personal favourite? The smug mantra: “We give them what they need, not what they want.” Ah yes, because obviously, Capco knows banking better than the bankers.
And the so-called expertise? Ask a critical question, and expect a pile of Google links in response. Thanks, we all know how to use a search engine.
Red Flag #4: Playing fast and loose with client data
Ethics? What’s that? One of the most troubling aspects at Capco was their expert ability to skirt the line on intellectual property misappropriation. They may not physically or electronically transfer client data, but they’re brilliant at... let’s say, "strategic reinterpretation."
Information from one client magically gets "repurposed" for another - particularly work Capco wasn’t even hired for. There is constant pressure to forward client messages to other teams or, more casually, fish for confidential legal clauses to use on different projects. Refusal to play along comes at a cost - “poor performance”
Whether it’s desperation, ignorance, or just a complete lack of ethics- who knows. But if their clients knew?
Red flag #5: Performative DEI at its finest
Capco’s DEI efforts? Pure theatre similar to other big UK corporates in general. A few token nods from leadership, some pointless training on cartoonishly overt discrimination scenarios, and general box-ticking. Real-world, subtle biases? Completely ignored. It’s less about meaningful change and more about career ladder-climbing via photo ops and committee roles, while the actual culture stays stuck in the past. Oh, they just love flaunting their so-called "meritocratic culture"- as if it's some shiny, revolutionary concept . And completely oblivious to the fact that it is an outdated punchline in most professional firms. Nothing screams "fair and just" like using it as a convenient smokescreen for quietly upholding the same old biases. Bravo!
Red flag #6: Lies, damn lies, and “expertise”
One day, expect to be a generalist consultant. The next, surprise! expect to be deployed as a subject matter expert in an area you’ve never worked in. How do you find out? The client tells you, Capco doesn’t bother. Good luck figuring it out on the fly! The irony? After days of self-learning, you’ll probably do an excellent job and get kudos from the client. Just don’t expect recognition from Capco - unless a single-line mention counts, while senior leadership take the credit.
Red flag #7: Leadership- Because micromanagement is a skill
Leadership at Capco? It’s the perfect blend of obsessive control, hierarchy, and deep-rooted insecurity. They like barking orders like it’s basic training. Collaborative discussions? as common as unicorns with a Harvard degree. Instead, expect a flood of “urgent” instant messages, random beck-and-call tasks like solving computer problems (seriously, you have tech support for that!) , and an overwhelming focus on maintaining appearances. Important meetings? Sparse, and when they do happen, they’re less about actual work and more about random rants like bashing “woke” Gen-Z, or playing the blame-game where you get publicly scolded for not knowing things you were never told . The real trick? Leadership deflects from their own blunders by making them someone else’s problem. Oh, and don’t be fooled by that mandatory internal coach they assign you—it’s less mentorship, more corporate babysitting. If the company actually cared about your well-being and growth, they’d offer an external coach if YOU wanted one, not because they insisted. Be very careful what you discuss with your coach.
Red Flag #8: Obsess over your flaws!
While most companies now focus on employee strengths, Capco are still on a noble mission- to fix you! Expect relentless focus on your supposed weaknesses. Because, clearly, all Capco senior leadership are flawless specimens of human perfection!
Red Flag #9: The ultimate irony—performance reviews
At Capco, performance reviews aren’t about performance- they’re about politics and fitting the mould. And if you don’t fit the stereotype of who they favour, well, don’t be surprised when bias works against you, and your efforts go unnoticed or are held against you.
- Impress the client? Oops, you’ve only made management insecure.
- Work long hours smartly and tirelessly? irrelevant- but great immune system!
- Get pressured into out-of-scope work, only to be blamed when it backfires? Classic poor performer
-Stay available while management vanishes? Nice try, but invisible effort doesn’t count.
-Question the strategic repurposing of client IP? Now you’re just difficult.
***How to survive at Capco (If you must):
Want to succeed here? Follow these rules - with a caveat: If you don’t fit the usual mould , any attempt to protect yourself or assert boundaries may be met with bias, and you might be labeled as “aggressive” or “not a team player.”
1) Success here is less about knowledge and skill, and more about how well you play the political game. If that’s not your thing, exit quickly.
2) Cover your backside – If it’s not in writing, it never happened. Raise a concern verbally? Cute—but follow up with an email, or prepare to watch reality get mysteriously rewritten. Pro tip: modern tech is your best friend.
3) Tread carefully when saying 'no' – Despite all the corporate spiel about “pushing back and when to say no,” it sounds great until you actually do it. If you must, document it.
4) Escalate before you get escalated– Normally, in a mature company, you’d try to resolve issues within a team, leaving escalation as the last option. Here? insecure leadership will escalate against you while pretending to have a friendly chat. Pre-emptive escalation is your best defence. Unfortunately it seems to be an ingrained culture, passed down over the years. No chats in Capco are 'informal'.
5) Keep calm and suck it up. Use sycophant-wranglers to your advantage. Be a 'yes' person.
6) Sure, “be yourself at work” sounds great - when times are good. But when redundancies loom , client extensions dry up, and the time for scapegoating comes, that feel- good mantra disappears faster than your job security. That’s when you see Capco’s true colours… and spoiler: they’re not pretty.
7) Last but not least - Never, ever trust HR. Think of them as the border collies of corporate herd management-except instead of protecting the flock, they’re steering it exactly where leadership wants. All that “fairness” talk? It’s just a smokescreen for enabling bad behavior. Don’t expect them to have your back.
Final thought: Get out while you can.
Treat Capco as a pit-stop, not a career destination or you might lose your soul in this toxic culture. If you value integrity, real expertise, and leadership that leads by example, look elsewhere. If you’re already here, document everything, protect yourself, and plan your escape. The moment you leave, you’ll realise just how much better life is outside the Capco bubble.
In true Capco fashion, expect a corporate-y response about how none of this reflects their "amazing culture." Expect a dramatic defence of their integrity, maybe even a heartfelt vow to protect client IP, and, of course, a well-placed puff of smoke aimed at Wipro - well, you get the idea.
If only they put that much effort into actually fixing problems.