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First 2 weeks in BCG - Am I the only one feeling this way?

Hey, my first two weeks at BCG have been intense beyond what I expected. I was staffed on day two with basically no proper onboarding (they're consolidating it for next month), working remotely with a tiny team where everyone's traveling. I'm also balancing how many questions to ask while showing I can navigate ambiguity. Between the knowledge gaps, learning curve, and delivering within a week, some days I feel pretty defeated.

It's this mix of feeling lost and overwhelmed while barely having time to settle in. I'm too drained to even think about networking right now, which feels backwards since I'm not doing myself the service of making myself 'known,' if you get what I mean.

Is this normal, or am I struggling to adapt to a completely different ball game? (I reckon this is how they filter for capable, high-performing employees.) I'm wondering if this is just the expected environment, whether others felt this way when they started, and if it gets better with time.

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Kevin
Coach
edited on Jul 19, 2025
1st session -50% | Ex-McKinsey | Ex-BCG | MBB Germany Expert | CV & Cover Letter Review | FREE 15min intro call!

Hi there,

That happens more often than you think - don't worry, you're definitely not alone. Many of us felt the same way in our first weeks at MBB, especially with immediate staffing and little onboarding.

A few quick tips:

  • Don't be afraid to ask, but do so in a goal-oriented manner: Ask structured questions instead of worrying about bothering people. It shows curiosity, not weakness. Try to offer hypotheses and solution-oriented questions whenever possible.
  • Try to travel with your team if possible: It helps build relationships and gives you informal moments to ask questions, which reduces the feeling of being isolated.
  • Keep clear notes of what you learn: Asking is fine and the learning curve is supposed to be steep, but repeating the same question signals chaos rather than curiosity.
  • Focus on surviving, not networking: Building connections will come naturally once you’ve found your rhythm on the project. No need to do it in the stressful onboarding phase.

It does get better – the pace stays high, but you’ll adapt.

Happy to chat if helpful!

Mariana
Coach
on Jul 18, 2025
xMckinsey | Consulting and Tech | 1.5h session | +200 sessions | Free 20-min introductory call

Hi there,

I was also staffed in a similar project in my first week of work. All of my colleagues were in different countries and no support was given.

I felt bad, cried a lot and discovered almost everyone faces the same things (tears included).

Try to understand what tools the company provides you to excel at your job. For instance, at least at McKinsey there are experts to help you with almost anything. Content-related (if you have questions related to the scope) and task-related (if you need help with excel, alteryx, PPT, etc).

If you know the names of the people that joined the comoany with you, it may be interesting to reach out to them, to find your group.

It will get better!

Best,

Mari

Pallav
Coach
on Jul 19, 2025
Non-target expert | Ex-BCG | >200 cases

Hey — first of all, congratulations on starting at BCG. And second, what you’re feeling? Completely normal. Truly. Let me add a few real points to all the great advice you’ve likely already seen.

 

1️⃣ 

Everyone’s First Few Weeks Are Chaotic — Just in Different Ways
 

When I joined BCG, my batchmates and I all had wildly different starts — some were staffed late, some were staffed on day 1 and shipped to another continent (like me), others landed big-name cases with massive teams, and some were put on solo client modules with little support. None of it reflected talent — it was just staffing randomness and timing.


 

So don’t read too much into how your start looks. What matters is how you adapt and stabilize over the first 2–3 months.

 

2️⃣ 

You’re Not Alone — But You Are on Your Own (Kind Of)

 

BCG has support on paper — buddies, mentors, onboarding resources — but in the real world, you often feel like you’re being thrown into the deep end. That’s intentional to a degree.
 

You’re expected to figure out the basics fast and then know when to escalate, ask, or self-navigate. That balance is hard, but you’re already trying to find it — which means you’re on the right path.
 

Here’s what helped me:
 

  • Grab time with your PL. Snatch 15 mins regularly — not just for task updates, but to say, “Here’s what I’m seeing. Am I focusing on the right things?”
  • Treat every principal/partner meeting like a case interview. Structure your updates. Keep your communication tight. Show you’re learning fast. They’re still evaluating — even subtly.
  • Be in the office on Fridays if you can. That’s when real bonding and casual debriefs happen. It’s informal but valuable — especially for visibility and peer connection.
     

3️⃣ 

About Feeling Drained and Not Networking — That’s Okay (For Now)
 

Yes, networking matters at BCG. But in the first 4–6 weeks, your focus should be surviving and learning fast. No one expects you to master both delivery and internal visibility on week 2.
 

Once you feel a bit steadier — even 10% more — you’ll naturally start picking your head up and making connections. But right now? Don’t burn out trying to play every game at once. You’re still onboarding in the battlefield — it’s fine to prioritize survival over visibility for a few more weeks.
 

Final Thought
 

Yes — the pressure is part of the environment. But it’s not there to break you — it’s there to build your instincts. Most people I know (myself included) felt lost, behind, and underqualified in the beginning. The ones who did well? Asked for help when needed, kept their structure under pressure, and didn’t try to be perfect — just better each week.

 

It gets better. You’ll find your footing.

Happy to chat more if it helps — I’ve been through exactly this.

– Pallav

Emily
Coach
on Jul 19, 2025
9 years in MBB Southeast Asia & China| 8 years as MBB interviewer | Free intro call

It is very normal to feel overwhelmed in the first few weeks (even few months) especially when you had no training and no proper team set up yet. 

No hurry to think about networking or make yourself known - you want to make yourself known with a good reputation as someone who does well on case, not someone still struggling to figure things out. So worry about that after you already ramp up the learning curve. 

More helpful for you at this stage is to get to know a few of your peers so that you can have a "support group" who are going through the same process and might share with each other what each of you learn. 

Best,

Emily

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