Ho presentato la mia candidatura tramite l'università. La procedura ha richiesto una settimana. Ho sostenuto un colloquio presso McKinsey & Company (New Toronto, ON) nel mese di nov 2010
Colloquio
The skill test itself is not very difficult at all, however their case interviews require knowing their format. I did not find the cases hard and in fact got hired at another consultancy but Mckinsey's feedback to me was to memorize their format and stick to it. It was less about the answers and more about knowing I had reviewed and studied their process intently, which admittedly I did not even look at except for the short webinar the weekend before. Practice and learn their process. Overall, a bit of arrogance from those I interviewed with leading me to question the culture though I cannot speak to it.
Ho sostenuto un colloquio presso McKinsey & Company (‘Ushayrah, Riyadh Province)
Colloquio
Rigorous but fair questions - mostly case based. Two sets of interviews x 2 rounds. You only get invited back for the afternoon if you pass the morning round. They expect a high degree of mental math and creativity. Worth prepping for standard case interview style questions, using frameworks but able to adapt them.
Ho sostenuto un colloquio presso McKinsey & Company (Washington, DC)
Colloquio
Long process with little to no communication, good folks though. Not too difficult just time consuming. Pulled out after the first round as I lost interest, but appreciated the opportunity to interview.
Domande di colloquio [1]
Domanda 1
Prior experience and what I wanted out of the role
Ho sostenuto un colloquio presso McKinsey & Company
Colloquio
The interview process is structured and demanding. It includes a resume screen, problem solving tests, and multiple case interviews with personal experience questions. It’s objectively hard, testing structured thinking, communication, and calm under pressure. Not impossible but you must prepare seriously.
Domande di colloquio [1]
Domanda 1
They asked me to walk through a case and clearly structure the problem first. How I broke it down mattered more than getting the final answer right.