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Case interview at Porsche Consulting

Hello everyone! 

I have a case interview coming up at Porsche Consulting and was wondering if anyone has insights and tips here, since they don't follow the "usual" approach. I will be getting some information, then be left alone for 10 minutes to work on the case and then present my results for 5 minutes afterwards.

How can I best prepare for such an interview? Which types of cases usually occur in such settings? 

Any insights on how to approach this best would be highly appreciated!

Thank you in advance! 

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Profile picture of Ashwin
Ashwin
Coach
11 hrs ago
Ex-Bain | 500+ MBB Offers

Porsche Consulting's format is different from MBB, and that actually works in your favor if you prepare right. This is a "case presentation" style. You get info, work alone for 10 minutes, then present for 5 minutes. No back and forth during analysis.

What they are really testing:

  • Can you scan information quickly and spot what matters?
  • Can you structure a problem under time pressure without guidance?
  • Can you deliver a clear recommendation, not just analysis?

How to use the 10 minutes:

  • First 2 min: Read everything. Do not solve yet. Identify the core question and key data.
  • Next 5 min: Build your structure. Three buckets max. Do the math. Get to a directional answer.
  • Last 3 min: Prep your presentation flow. Opening line, structure, key insight, recommendation. Do not script, just nail the flow.

For the 5 minute presentation. Lead with your recommendation within the first 30 seconds. "I would recommend X, here is why." Then walk through your logic. Do not narrate your thought process chronologically. That is boring and wastes time.

On case types. Porsche Consulting focuses on operational efficiency, lean transformation, and manufacturing. Expect cost optimization, production improvement, or supply chain cases. Think "how would you improve throughput at this plant" not "should this company enter China."

Key thing most candidates miss. Structure and clarity matter more than the "right" answer. They know you cannot solve it perfectly in 10 minutes. They want sharp thinking and confident delivery.

Practice by giving yourself exactly 10 minutes on any case, then present out loud for 5 minutes. Record yourself. You will immediately spot where you ramble.

Profile picture of Cristian
11 hrs ago
Most awarded coach | Ex-McKinsey | Verifiable 88% offer rate (annual report) | First-principles cases + PEI storylining

This approach is actually rather conventional. It's the condensed form of a 'written case.'

With these, the critical thing is time management. And what is tested is both around content and delivery. 

If you need help with these, reach out and I can walk you through the process.

Best,
Cristian

Profile picture of Margot
Margot
Coach
9 hrs ago
10% discount for 1st session I Ex-BCG, Accenture & Deloitte Strategist | 6 years in consulting I Free Intro-Call

Hi there,

feel free to reach out, as I do have insights for this industry and the DACH region.

Best

Margot

Profile picture of Kevin
Kevin
Coach
29 min ago
Ex-Bain (London) | Private Equity & M&A | 12+ Yrs Experience | The Reflex Method | Free Intro Call

This is a fantastic question, and you've rightly identified that this isn't the standard approach for many firms. Porsche Consulting, given its lean, action-oriented culture, uses this format to simulate a very real consulting challenge: how do you quickly synthesize limited information, structure a problem, and articulate a path forward under tight deadlines? It's less about finding the perfect answer and more about demonstrating your ability to prioritize, communicate a logical framework, and project confidence with incomplete data.

During your 10 minutes of solo prep, your goal isn't to solve the entire case. Instead, focus on defining the core problem, outlining 2-3 key drivers or hypotheses you'd explore, and drafting a crisp recommendation with actionable next steps. Think "MECE enough" structure for your thinking, not a fully flushed-out analysis. For the 5-minute presentation, lead with your recommendation, quickly lay out your supporting logic (the 2-3 key drivers), and finish with clear next steps or further questions you'd investigate. Remember, they're looking for your ability to frame, not necessarily to calculate.

Practice this exact timing, perhaps using simplified case prompts from general prep materials. Focus on your opening and closing, and make sure your structure is clear even if the depth isn't there. It sucks to feel rushed, but that's part of the test.

All the best with it!