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From supply chain to consulting

Hi,

I am an engineering student (applier mathematics) at my final year at Centrale Lyon (Top 5-10 french engineering school) with 3.8/4.0 GPA

I've done 3 internships at big companies but none of them was consulting : ( 1 month as a logistics operator at an airbus subcontractor , 6 months at groupe seb ( big french group owner of t-fal and 30 other brands)  as a demand planner, and 6 months at l'oréal as a supply planner.  

For my end of studies internship i am willing to break into consulting (Strategy or operations) at MBB or tier 2.

Do you think it is possible ?

thank you

kind regards

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Profile picture of Mauro
Mauro
Coach
on Apr 17, 2026
Ex Bain AP | +200 interviews | 15years experience | Top MBB coach

Hi Anonymous, yes, it’s absolutely possible — your profile is actually quite relevant.

Coming from Centrale Lyon with a strong GPA is already a very solid base. On top of that, your internships in supply chain are not a weakness — if anything, they can be a strength, especially for:

  • operations consulting
  • transformation projects
  • even strategy roles with an operational angle

What matters is how you position them.

Right now, you shouldn’t think:
“I didn’t do consulting internships”

But rather:
“I’ve worked on real business problems (planning, demand, operations) in top companies”

That’s valuable.

A couple of things to focus on:

1. Position your experience in a consulting way
In your CV and interviews, highlight:

  • problem solving (what was the issue?)
  • impact (what did you improve?)
  • ownership

Even in supply chain roles, there are always elements like:

  • optimizing processes
  • improving forecasts
  • reducing inefficiencies

That’s very close to consulting work.

2. Be clear on your story
You’ll need a strong answer to:
“Why consulting now?”

Something like:

  • you’ve seen operations from the inside
  • you now want broader exposure and more strategic impact

3. Prepare interviews properly
At your level, this is often the real differentiator.

Good candidates get rejected because of:

  • weak structure
  • lack of case practice

So make sure you:

  • practice cases consistently
  • get comfortable with math and structuring

4. Be realistic but ambitious
MBB is competitive, but your profile is definitely in range.
Also apply to Tier 2 — they’re great options and often a very good entry point.

Overall, you’re in a good position.
You don’t need a “perfect consulting background” — you just need to present your experience well and perform in interviews.

If you want, happy to help you refine your CV or practice cases.

Profile picture of Tommaso
Tommaso
Coach
on Apr 17, 2026
Ex-McKinsey | MBA @ Berkeley Haas | No-nonsense coaching | 50% off on the first meeting in April

Hi there!


First of all, don't worry, breaking into consulting is absolutely possible. To give you some perspective, in my experience at McKinsey, at least 30% of my colleagues came from an engineering background.


Here is generally how it works. Candidates entering straight out of an undergrad or Master of Science program are typically hired for generalist roles. Sometimes they are brought in as digital profiles, but even then, they still do a significant amount of generalist work. Experienced hires with 4+ YOE, instead, are the ones brought in with specific functional or industry expertise. 

The main issue is really how you manage to pass the initial screening, because MBB candidates are constantly increasing. In this case, getting a referral can definitely help you secure an interview. Then, regarding the case preparation, that is where you truly have the opportunity to make a difference if you make it to the interviews.


Best,


Tom
 

Profile picture of Soheil
Soheil
Coach
on Apr 17, 2026
INSEAD | EM & Strategy Consultant | 3.5Y Consulting | 5★ Case Coach | 350+ Cases | 50+ Live Interviews | MBB-Level

Hi,

Short answer: yes, it’s definitely possible — and your profile is actually quite relevant.

I’ve seen candidates from engineering schools like move into consulting without prior consulting internships. Firms (including MBB) hire a lot of engineers — what they care about is how you think, not whether you’ve “done consulting before.”

Your internships in supply chain are not a weakness. If anything, they’re useful — especially for operations and transformation work, which is a big part of what many consulting firms do.

The only issue is how it might sound on paper.

If your experience is described in a very operational way (e.g., “demand planner”, “supply planner”), it can feel a bit narrow. But if you frame it properly, it becomes much stronger:
you’ve worked on forecasting, managing supply-demand complexity, improving processes — these are real business problems.

So it’s less about changing your background, and more about how you present it.

A couple of things I’d focus on:

  • Make your CV results-oriented (what did you improve, what was the impact?)
  • Be very clear on your story: why consulting after supply chain
  • Start case prep early — this is what will really make the difference
  • Do some networking to increase your chances of getting interviews

In terms of realism:
Tier 2 firms are very achievable with your profile. MBB is also possible, but more competitive — so execution (CV + interviews) really matters.

If I put it simply: you don’t lack the “right background.” You just need to position it in a way that shows you’ve already been solving the kind of problems consultants work on.

If you want, happy to take a look at your CV or help you shape your story — profiles like yours can work very well with a few adjustments.

 

Best,

Soheil

Profile picture of Cristian
14 hrs ago
Most awarded MBB coach on the platform | verified 88% success rate | ex-McKinsey | Oxford | worked with ~400 candidates

Hi there, 

Yes, with the right approach. 

Most importantly, you should prioritise entering the industry over entering a specific firm. 

You might find this guide useful:

Expert Guide: Build A Winning Application Strategy

If you need any help, reach out.

Best,
Cristian