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They quit Bain, McKinsey, and BCG to be AI founders — and had to unlearn consulting fast

Business Insider
Lee Chong Ming,Kelsey Vlamis

These former MBB consultants left to found AI startups. Julius Bruch, Kevin Wu, Daphne Tay/ Bluente, Nathan Wangliao The path to partnership used to be the dream — especially at Bain, McKinsey, or BCG. But in the AI boom, some consultants have traded slide decks for startups. As AI reshapes industries and lowers the barriers to building a company, advising from the sidelines no longer feels like enough. Several of the former consultants we spoke to said they'd long had the itch to build. AI simply made the timing feel right. Others said that after years in consulting, owning a business — rather than recommending strategies to others — felt like the natural next step. The shift away from the Big Four — EY, Deloitte, PwC, and KPMG — has become more pronounced. James Ransome, a partner and strategy consulting lead at Patrick Morgan, a firm specializing in senior partner hiring and industry analysis, said last year that there was an "exodus" from traditional consulting powerhouses. At the same time, traditional consulting hiring has slowed. Data from workforce intelligence firm Revelio Labs shows entry-level inflows into consulting firms fell 54% year-over-year in June 2025. Among more senior hires — what Revelio classifies as "manager" level — monthly inflows dropped 22%, the firm told Business Insider in a September report. For those who moved, it wasn't easy to shed their consulting background. "I went from being in a huge office with all kinds of perks to being in a coworking space with just two other people," Nathan Wangliao, who left McKinsey in his 20s for startup life, told Business Insider. "We had to figure everything out from scratch." In his first month, he even considered going back. "This feels too scary," he recalled thinking. Many of these former consultants said they had to unlearn consulting habits, such as overanalyzing, chasing perfect data, and avoiding risk. As one of them put it, being in a startup means needing to "move fast with scrappy pragmatism." We spoke with four former consultants about why they left MBB firms to build AI startups, what consulting taught them, and what it took to break away. Read more stories about these consultants who left to become AI founders Read the original article on Business Insider