Back to overview

How do you influence leadership via an analysis?

This feels like a straightforward question but somehow I am struggling with it. 

Here's how I am framing it in my head: 

I understand the problem or business case, I align with stakeholders on what their problem areas are and bring forth their perspective to help solve the business case using data. The data is focused around the main drivers to solve the business case. For example: working with sales leadership and product to drive a new rewards construct for an application requires data to substantiate the correct 'inventory.' The data points to the business case, which in this case also involves having sufficient coverage and 'sticky' rewards merchants. The data shows which merchants would be a good fit and are stickiest based on my analysis and hence it speaks for itself. Example KPIs that I analyze are RPU, store sessions, number of offers live, whether there is an affiliate program for the brand, and how many distinct consumers are both engaging with the brand. Nothing fancy. 

I summarize the findings starting with the key take-away first. E.g. out of the 30K merchants I analyzed, I found these 15 merchants to be a good fit due to their RPU, distinct users per month, and repeat purchase behavior by users. The data speaks for itself but I also customize the delivery in such a way that it solves the leadership business case. In this case, what merchants should we run a rewards pilot with. 

What is my answer missing? How can I make it better? Or am I overthinking it lol 

5
< 100
0
Be the first to answer!
Nobody has responded to this question yet.
Top answer
Profile picture of Franco
Franco
Coach
15 hrs ago
Ex BCG Principal & Global Interviewer (10+ Years) | 100+ MBB Offers | 95% Success Rate

Hi,

The key is linking your results back to the core business question, and from there deriving clear business or strategic insights. That’s what turns analysis into something useful.

Then you take it one step further and drive the discussion forward through concrete next steps.

So instead of focusing on the analysis itself, the flow becomes:
analysis → insight → implication → next steps

That’s really where influence comes from.

Hope it helps,
Franco

Profile picture of Alessa
Alessa
Coach
11 hrs ago
10% off 1st session | Ex-McKinsey Consultant & Interviewer | PEI | MBB Prep | Ex-BCG

Hey there :)

You’re actually very close, you’re just missing the “so what + action + buy-in” layer. Right now your story is strong on analysis, but influencing leadership is less about the data itself and more about how you drive a decision with it.

What would make it stronger is explicitly showing three things: first, that you framed the decision upfront, not just the analysis. For example, “which merchants maximize adoption while staying operationally scalable.” Second, that you translated insights into a clear recommendation with trade-offs, not just “these 15 are good” but “I recommend starting with these 5 for X reason, and here’s the risk.” Third, that you actively managed stakeholders, meaning you pre-aligned, handled pushback, and adapted your message to what leadership cares about.

So instead of “the data speaks for itself,” position it more like “I used the data to guide leadership to a decision and got alignment.” That’s the key shift.

You’re definitely overthinking a bit, your base is already strong, it just needs to sound more decision-oriented and less analysis-only. If you want, I can help you turn this into a perfect interview answer.

best,
Alessa :)

Profile picture of Mauro
Mauro
Coach
10 hrs ago
Ex Bain AP | +200 interviews | 15years experience | Top MBB coach

Hi!
You’re actually in a good spot — your thinking is solid. You’re not missing much, it’s more about how you frame it.

The main thing I’d adjust is this idea that “the data speaks for itself.” In reality, with leadership, it doesn’t. They expect you to interpret it and take a stance.

So instead of just presenting what you found, make it explicit what you recommend and why. Even a small shift in wording helps: not “these 15 merchants look good,” but “I recommend prioritizing these 15 merchants for the pilot because they drive higher engagement and repeat usage.”

Another thing to strengthen is the link to the business objective. You’re already doing it, but you can make it more explicit. Always connect your analysis to what leadership actually cares about — growth, engagement, revenue, strategic priorities.

I’d also add a quick mention of trade-offs. For example, why these merchants and not others, or what you might be sacrificing. It shows you’re thinking beyond the numbers and builds credibility.

And finally, make it actionable. Close the loop with what happens next — pilot, KPIs to track, timeline. Leadership usually wants to know “so what do we do now?”

So overall, your structure is good. Just shift it slightly from “I analyze and present data” to “I use data to make a clear recommendation and drive a decision.”

Profile picture of Ian
Ian
Coach
edited on Mar 30, 2026
Top US BCG / MBB Coach - 5,000 sessions |Tech, Platinion, Big 4 | 9/9 personal interviews passed | 95% candidate success

You tell a compelling story.

Consulting isn't about analysis. (They barely analyze anything in the real job)

Consulting is storytelling.

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

This would require a longer and deeper discussion to actually be actionable. 

In short:

Figure out what the audience is looking for. What is it that they want to clarify / understand / need?

Then figure out what is the most compelling shape to deliver that message in. 

(As an aside, in consulting you

Start with the answer first if you have an audience that already trusts you

Or you bring the answer at the end after you've walked the audience through the process of getting to the answer if they don't yet trust you)

Best,
Cristian