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What do MBB & other big firms usually look for in the applicant's CV? as an entry-level candidate (meaning i have less than 3 years of experience and i come from non-typical background)

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Kevin
Coach
on Nov 09, 2025
Ex-Bain (London) | Private Equity & M&A | 12+ Yrs Experience | The Reflex Method | Free Intro Call

Great question — and even from a non-typical background, you can absolutely stand out if your CV tells the right story in the right way

Here’s what I think MBB and other top firms typically look for in entry-level CVs:

  1. Structured Thinking & Impact — Every bullet should follow the action → impact formula. Start with a strong verb (led, built, analyzed) and end with a quantifiable result (e.g., “Improved process speed by 25%” or “Built a tool used by 10+ team members”). Even if the role wasn’t “business-ish,” show how your work solved problems or made things better.
  2. Analytical Rigor & Problem Solving — Highlight any experience where you worked with numbers, broke down complex issues, or made decisions with incomplete data — this signals “consulting DNA.”
  3. Leadership & Ownership — MBB cares less about titles and more about initiative. Did you lead a student group, run a project solo, or drive something that wasn’t required of you? Include it, even if informal.
  4. Prestige Markers or Differentiators — If you don’t come from a target school or traditional background, flag what makes you stand out: awards, ranked performance, selective programs, or anything with a competitive bar.

Final tip: keep it clean and one page max. Use professional formatting, and make every word earn its place.

Hope it helps!

Evelina
Coach
on Nov 09, 2025
EY-Parthenon l Coached 300+ candidates into MBB & Tier-2 l 10% off first session l LBS graduate

Hi there,

For MBB and other top consulting firms, your CV should show impact, analytical strength and leadership potential — even if you come from a non-traditional background. They care less about where you started and more about the skills and results you demonstrate.

Here’s what to focus on:

  • Academic performance – strong GPA, scholarships, or any top-tier university credentials
  • Quantified impact – use numbers to show results (e.g. “Improved process efficiency by 15%,” “Managed €50k student project”)
  • Analytical experience – any role or project where you analyzed data, solved problems or built insights
  • Leadership & teamwork – initiatives, clubs, or projects where you led people or influenced outcomes
  • Clarity & structure – one page, clean formatting, consistent bullet style, and results starting each line with action verbs

Optional extras that help:

  • International exposure or mobility
  • Fluency in multiple languages
  • Technical familiarity (Excel, PowerPoint, basic analytics tools)

Happy to help you prep – feel free to reach out.

Best,
Evelina

Jenny
Coach
20 hrs ago
Buy 1 get 1 free for 1st time clients | Ex-McKinsey Manager & Interviewer | +7 yrs Coaching | Go from good to great

Hi there,

You’ll want to show evidence of being an overachiever, with strong analytical and problem-solving skills, impact-driven achievements, and leadership potential. Even if you come from a non-traditional background, focus on quantifiable results, structured thinking, and bullets for when you took initiative or ownership. Use a clear and concise format, with each bullet starting with an action verb and ending with measurable outcomes. Highlight experiences that show adaptability, teamwork, and drive.

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,

Firms like MBB don’t expect entry-level candidates to have consulting experience; they look for potential. What really matters is showing that you’ve already done things that reflect how consultants think and work.

They look for three main things:

  1. Evidence of problem solving: Times you analyzed a complex situation, made sense of data, or helped improve something, whether in university projects, internships, or personal initiatives.
  2. Ownership and drive: Experiences where you took initiative, led a small team, or made an idea happen from start to finish.
  3. Communication and structure: A CV that’s easy to follow, with clear bullet points showing impact (“increased X by Y%” works better than generic descriptions).

Even with a non-traditional background, what counts is that your story shows curiosity, adaptability, and the ability to deliver results: That’s what convinces recruiters you’ll learn fast and thrive in consulting.