PwC U.S. restricts entry-level consulting hires to 13 AI training hubs

NEW YORK, UNITED STATES — PwC is consolidating United States entry-level consulting hires into 13 offices to forge a new training model for the future of work, according to a Business Insider report.
The strategy, pivoting from its previous 72 U.S. locations, directly confronts how artificial intelligence (AI) is reshaping core consulting skills and the need for intensified human collaboration.
In‑person hubs to rebuild early-career skills
The firm identifies the isolation of remote work and AI’s disruption of traditional tasks as forces that have eroded vital learning connections for new employees.
By creating concentrated cohorts of junior talent in key hubs, PwC intentionally engineers an environment for the everyday, collaborative knowledge-sharing it deems essential.
The goal is to accelerate the development of human and technical skills through deliberate in-person interaction and mentorship in the formative first two years of a career.
This model is designed not to restrict careers but to strategically launch them with future-proof competencies. After the initial intensive period, associates have the mobility to transfer to other offices, aligning personal career geography with the skills they have collaboratively built.
Yolanda Seals-Coffield, Chief People and Inclusion Officer for PwC U.S., told Business Insider, “The idea is that we want to bring people together in a connected way for those first couple of years.”
The framework recognizes that basic human capabilities, such as empathy and critical thinking, can best be nurtured in a focused community environment that offers a lifeblood as the nature of their advisory practice shifts toward a mix of pure analysis and the management of AI-based tools.
Balancing human expertise with AI upskilling
The firm’s Learning Collective and associated office strategy are therefore operational blueprints for developing this hybrid workforce, where consultants must seamlessly integrate technical AI literacy with advanced human judgment.
This upskilling imperative is now a top strategic priority, as the profession moves from using AI as a tool to working alongside AI agents.
PwC’s strategy acknowledges that when automated means for routine analytical procedures are implemented, the value of specific human skills will increase.
“Getting our people to spend more time together, learning and growing in an intentional way, is the goal of the experience,” Seals-Coffield said.
PwC’s office consolidation signals a broader industry shift, betting that the essential human skills needed for an AI-driven workplace must be learned together in person.

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