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Incoming Bain - Should I join PEG right away?

For context, I have a non-technical business bachelors and did a few consulting internships in FS teams. Goal is a PE/VC exit in 3-4 years.

I am inclined to joining GP for ~6 months first before joining PEG, but does that give me a worse positioning for my goal and timeline?

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Profile picture of Franco
Franco
Coach
18 hrs ago
Ex BCG Principal & Global Interviewer (10+ Years) | 100+ MBB Offers | 95% Success Rate

Hi,

First of all, congratulations on the Bain offer.

In my view, the difference between starting in GP vs PEG for the first few months is pretty small. If your goal is to move to PE in 3–4 years, what really matters is that you accumulate a critical mass of due diligence and PE-related work over time, not whether your first few months are in GP or PEG.

Doing ~6 months in GP can actually be beneficial because it helps you build broader consulting fundamentals (structuring, problem solving, communication across industries). Those skills will be very useful when you later work on PE cases. As long as you move into PEG relatively early and start building exposure to due diligences, you will still be well positioned for PE exits.

Also keep in mind that in many Bain offices, staffing is quite fluid, and people often work on PEG projects even if they are not formally “in PEG” yet.

So I would not over-optimize the first few months. Focus instead on:

  • becoming a strong consultant quickly
  • getting exposure to due diligences within the first 1–2 years
  • building relationships with PEG partners and managers

That combination matters much more for PE recruiting than whether you start in PEG from day one.

Hope this helps.
Franco

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Komal
Coach
edited on Mar 16, 2026
50% off first session. MBB Consultant. Offers from McK, BCG, etc. LBS MBA. Practical coaching with in-depth feedback.

Hi, many congratulations on the offer. In the context of your goals and timeline, 6 months in general consulting will not hamper them at all. Infact, generalist consulting can help you in a few ways including broadening your skillset, knowledge, and network. You should, however, use this time to start building relationships within PEG so that they are just as excited to have you as you are to join them and are aactively considering you for the project pipeline. Best of luck!

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Ian
Coach
12 hrs ago
Top US BCG / MBB Coach - 5,000 sessions |Tech, Platinion, Big 4 | 9/9 personal interviews passed | 95% candidate success

Hi there,

Go to PEG. You have a clear goal — PE/VC exit in 3 to 4 years. PEG is where that happens.

The 6 months in GP idea... I get where it comes from. But what does it actually give you? Broader exposure you don’t need. The deal exposure and the network for a PE/VC exit live in PEG — deal flow, due diligence, the people who will refer you 3 years from now. Spending half a year in GP to “build a base” just delays the thing you said you want.

The only reason to go Generalist first is if you’re not sure PE/VC is actually right for you. Are you not sure? Sounds like you are. So go to PEG.

Two years from now — which do you regret more? Six months building a “base” in GP while your PEG cohort moves forward, or jumping straight in and being 6 months further down the path you actually want?

Start where you want to end up.

Worth reading before you start: Consulting Survival Guide. And if you haven’t fully thought through what life at Bain actually looks like: Pros and Cons of Working at a Top Consulting Firm. Congrats on the offer!

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Annika
Coach
3 hrs ago
10% off first session | ex-Bain | MBB Coach | ICF Coach | HEC Paris MBA | 13+ years experience

Firstly - congratulations on joining Bain !
From my experience, there are not always 'spots' available to get in the ringfence so raise your hand early that you're interested. If the opportunity becomes available, go for it!
If not, while you wait you ramp up well in GP and build your consulting toolbox.

Annika

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Ashwin
Coach
3 hrs ago
Ex-Bain | 500+ MBB Offers

If PE/VC exit is the goal, PEG is the obvious answer and you probably already know that. The question is whether starting in GP first actually hurts you.

Six months in GP will not damage your positioning. But it will slow you down. PEG work is where you build the deal exposure, the investor mindset, and the relationships that actually open PE doors. Every month in GP is a month you are not building that.

The one argument for GP first is getting your consulting fundamentals sharp before going into a more intense, specialized environment. If you feel your case execution and client communication need seasoning, six months in GP is not wasted. But if you feel ready, there is no strategic reason to delay.

One thing people underestimate: your PEG network matters as much as the work itself for a PE exit. The sooner you are inside that group, the more time you have to build relationships with the funds Bain works with. That is often how the exit actually happens.

With a 3 to 4 year timeline, you have some room. But if you can get into PEG from day one, do it.

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Denis
Coach
edited on Mar 16, 2026
Mid-Cap Private Equity | Ex-H.I.G. Capital | Ex-Goldman Sachs Investment Banker NYC | Ex-Bain & Co. | MBA Chicago Booth

When I joined Bain back in the day, spent 6 months in the GP, then joined the PEG ringfence for almost two years (most people cycle out after ~12 months, fluctuation in PEG is high). Not really something you can actively manage and decide, demand to join the ringfence is always higher than the # of spots.

Make it known (to staffing and your PDF advisor) that you d like to do it and join as soon as you can. In the meantime, try to get PE-relevant corporate staffings in the GP. For PEs (as someone who screens CV and interviews people for PE jobs myself) it is not necessarily important that you have PEG experience (given you won't do CDDs yourself when you work in PE).

In the end, you will have the Bain pedigree. If combining it with PEG, good. But placement is strongly driven by market opps and networks as well. Make sure you get credible deal experience in relevant industries and start talking to headhunters at least 1-2 years before you actually want to make a move. You will most likely have to go through them and the more of them you know (on a non-transactional basis), the better. Also they will be invaluable in giving you the inside scoop on how to optimize your profile.

Also, start networking with ex Bain PEG ppl (like myself) as early as possible after you have built some credible deal experience. PE is a small world so worthwhile getting your ducks in a row early.

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Alessa
Coach
52 min ago
10% off 1st session | Ex-McKinsey Consultant & Interviewer | PEI | MBB Prep | Ex-BCG

hey there :)

If your goal is a PE/VC exit in 3 to 4 years, joining PEG directly is usually the stronger positioning because you start building deal exposure and investor interaction immediately. Spending ~6 months in GP first won’t hurt, but it typically doesn’t add much value for PE recruiting and slightly delays the most relevant experience. If you already know you want PE, I would generally recommend starting in PEG right away. Happy to chat more if helpful.

best,
Alessa :)