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Consulting Internship Recruiting

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I’m currently a junior in college. Post-junior year is well known to be the most important time to get a “good” internship, especially when considering conversion to a full-time job. Because of this, I thought it would be interesting to share my internship recruiting journey, which began around mid-August 2024 (when I wrapped up my post-sophomore year summer internship) and ended around mid-October (when I received some offers I’m happy with).

As a note, consulting was never a “dream” goal for me. Going into the process, I knew I’d be happy with an offer from a top consulting firm, but consulting was not something I was categorically aiming for. Consulting firms were only a fraction (<15%) of the companies I applied to (the vast majority were technology companies); this post is about consulting recruiting simply because those firms were the fastest to get me to an offer I was satisfied with. Before this year, I had never recruited for consulting, and I’ve never been involved in consulting clubs (or any other business-related organization) on campus.

Here is a Sankey diagram of my recruiting experience. This shows which of my applications got to each stage of the recruiting process.

And some stats you might find interesting:

Because this was my first time recruiting for consulting, I won’t even pretend to be an expert on the process. But I will try to draw some broader insights from my experience that may be helpful for your own recruiting.

Take it easy

I know many people who see consulting as their dream, all-or-nothing career. While I can understand the interest, I don’t think it’s sustainable to see any field in that way when there are so many factors outside an applicant’s control. Having alternatives and backups make it much less stressful during the recruiting process. I felt reasonably sure that I could secure an internship in transportation consulting or technology if big 4/MBB fell through, so I didn’t feel too stressed or anxious during the recruiting process. This, without question, made it much easier for me to perform at my best in my interviews.

Find strong experiences

Last year, I applied to over 150 roles and received only a handful of interviews. This year, I applied to much fewer roles and received many more invites. With the assumption that interview invites are mostly driven by resume quality, there were a few things that I think improved the strength of my resume:

I did not do any of these things solely to make my resume stronger; rather, everything happened out of interest and curiosity. I’ve thoroughly enjoyed my involvement with both student organizations, as well as my time at Disney. It’s coincidence that my involvement and work has led to some professional benefits too.

So based on this, if my experience is taken to be representative, having impactful experiences at (a) big name company while staying involved on campus will really help secure interviews. This is probably in line with what any university career center would say!

Prepping for interviews

Many people have asked me about how I prepared for my interviews. To be honest, I didn’t prepare significantly for any interviews other than my McKinsey final round – I did about 1 hour of prep before Bain and BCG, 30 minutes a day for one week before McKinsey, and zero for the rest. I would have prepared more if I could, but most of my interviews were scheduled while I was travelling and attending conferences every week. Because of this, I didn’t have as much time as I would have liked to prepare. (The McKinsey interview was especially late, so I had some more time to prep.)

These are some resources I found especially helpful while preparing. Coming from no prior consulting experience, they helped me understand the thought process, structure, and format the interviews were looking for.

You might notice that these resources skew heavily towards McKinsey. This isn’t a coincidence; I felt that McKinsey had the most difficult interviews out of all the firms I recruited for. On the behavioral front, this is obvious: McKinsey’s Personal Experience Interview is more rigorous than any behavioral interview I had previously completed. I found McKinsey’s own website was an excellent resource to inspire the stories I shared during my interviews. And for the case interview, I think McKinsey’s cases test problem solving skills more the other firms – Bain and BCG skew more towards business acumen, while big 4 is mostly straightforward domain knowledge.

Lastly, go to bed early the night before – it really does help with problem solving and creativity!

Is networking necessary?

Some advice I’ve seen in many places is that you need to network to get a consulting interview invite. At least for internships, this doesn’t seem to be universally true. I did not do any networking relevant to any of my consulting applications, and was still successful. Take this with a grain of salt, but I think this shows it’s absolutely possible to break into the space without networking.

MBB vs. non-MBB recruiting

There are already many obvious differences between MBB and non-MBB consulting firms, such as salaries, working hours, and prestige, but their recruiting experiences differ significantly too. I’ll highlight a few major distinctions I observed.

Even though MBB interviews were more difficult, I felt they attacked more interesting problems and had more engaged interviewers. Because of this, I enjoyed my MBB interviews more – it was actually quite interesting and fun to talk about difficult problems with smart, incisive people.

Feedback I received

In no specific order, this is the feedback I received from my MBB interviewers:

Conclusion

I’m hoping my experience shows that it is absolutely possible to break into consulting without prior experience in the field. In my view, consulting is more accessible than other white-collar fields like investment banking – it just takes some drive and curiosity!

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