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How to setup efficient timeline of interviews

Hi guys,

i am currently wrapping up my internship at a T3 consulting firm.
Looking at fulltime, i already sent out most of my applications and received invites from BCG, Bain, S&, OC&C and Roland Berger.
I also have a return offer at the T3.

Since I did not expect that many invites, I am not sure how to put them in the most efficient timeline. (August and September) 
Currently I am most drawn to Bain. I also have prepped decently the last month.

What would be your tips? 

Thanks for any tips in advance!

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Top answer
Emily
Coach
on Jul 24, 2025
Bain Associate Partner, BCG Project Leader | 9 years in MBB SEA & China, with 8 years as interviewer | Free intro call

Hi there,

Well done in getting so many invites! 

You might have some flexibility to discuss with the recruiting teams regarding the interview date / time, within the windows they can accommodate. So, if possible, you might want to schedule your Bain and BCG interviews to a later timeline, when you've already get a bit more practice with the others. E.g., S&, OC&C, RB in August to early Sep, then Bain and BCG in mid to late Sep. 

Best,

Emily

Mihir
Coach
on Jul 24, 2025
McKinsey Associate Partner and interviewer | Bulletproof MBB prep

Worth checking with recruiters as to how you can schedule your interviews, as Emily said.

It may make sense to put your priority interviews towards the middle or a bit later of the period, to make sure you have some 'live' interview experience beforehand

Salman
Coach
on Jul 24, 2025
Ex-McKinsey (Dubai) | 4+ YoE | Jr. Engagement Manager in Private Capital + Public Sector | Interviewer-led MBB coaching

You should absolutely use the fact that you’re interviewing at multiple firms to your advantage.

All the firms you listed expect top candidates to be in parallel processes. Mentioning it casually when scheduling can help you buy time, pace yourself, and subtly signal that you're in demand. Just don’t overplay it or use it as a threat.

Try to schedule your least-preferred interviews first as warm-ups. Save Bain (your top choice) for when you're sharpest, ideally after 2–3 live reps. Be proactive about managing timelines, I'm sure they'll accommodate if you communicate early.

Mariana
Coach
on Jul 24, 2025
xMckinsey | Consulting and Tech | 1.5h session | +200 sessions | Free 20-min introductory call

Go with Emily’s approach, scheduled it with Bain first for the latest date possible and then continue scheduling from the ones you like the most to the least liked ones, scheduling from late to early in the reverse order. Does that sound confusing? I guess, but you’ve got the point right? 😜

Best,

Mari

Evelina
Coach
13 hrs ago
EY-Parthenon (7 years) l BCG offer holder l 97% success rate l 10% off first session l free 15' intro call l LBS

Hi there,

Great job securing so many invites—clearly your prep and experience are paying off!

Since you're aiming for Bain and already have a T3 return offer as a fallback, you’re in a strong position to strategically stagger your interviews. Here's a smart way to approach it:

  1. Schedule lower-priority interviews first (e.g., OC&C, Roland Berger). These are perfect for getting back into the rhythm of real interviews and sharpening your live performance without the pressure.
  2. Target your top choices (Bain, BCG) for 2–3 weeks later, once you’ve had a few live runs and refined your approach based on feedback.
  3. Leave some buffer between interviews—avoid packing them all into a single week. Spread them across August and early/mid-September so you can adjust based on how each round goes.
  4. Stay in touch with recruiters and don’t hesitate to politely request timeline adjustments if needed—firms are usually flexible within reason.

By building momentum and learning as you go, you’ll be in peak form when it counts most.

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

Best,
Evelina

Hagen
Coach
4 hrs ago
#1 recommended coach | >95% success rate | 9+ years consulting, interviewing and coaching experience

Hi there,

First of all, congratulations on the invitations!

I would be happy to share my thoughts on your question:

  • First of all, I would strongly advise you to consider doing a case interview diagnostic with an experienced coach like me to understand your current level of readiness. The last thing you want is to create and coordinate an interview plan with the recruiting departments, only to find out later that you're not yet ready for the interviews.
  • Moreover, with only five consulting firms, I would advise you to save your top consulting firms for last and work your way backwards. Here as well, working with an experienced coach like me who has developed numerous interview plans for coachees may help you lay out your plan realistically, so that overlaps are minimized.

You can find more on this topic here: How to succeed in the final interview round.

If you would like a more detailed discussion on how to best prepare your interview plan and/or for your interviews, please don't hesitate to contact me directly.

Best,

Hagen

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