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McK: Capabilities and insights group vs Energy Insights group

Is there a difference between the Energy Insights group or is the C&I group for the energy/oil&gas industry? 

My understanding (and I don't recall the exact name of the tracks) was that McKinsey had a pure consultant track (i.e., generalist BA, etc.), a 50%-50% consulting and solution/research track (from my understanding this is the Energy Insights analyst track) and then an expert/purely research/non-client track.

Would a capabilities and insights analyst for oil and gas fall under that third umbrella (the purely non-client track)?

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Top answer
on May 22, 2023
#1 Rated McKinsey Coach | Top MBB Coach | Verifiable success rates

Hi there, 

To be honest, these namings change so quickly that it's hard to keep up with them. Even when you're inside the firm :)

My recommendation would be to reach out to HR and ask about this so you get the most up to date answer.

Best,
Cristian

Emily
Coach
on May 22, 2023
300+ coached cases | Former McKinsey interviewer + recruiting lead| End-to-end prep in 2 weeks

Hi there! Great question – I've worked with many C&I analysts at McKinsey and they do have a very different role from consultants.

C&I analysts are not purely non-client; they actually fall more into your second bucket (50%-50% consulting and solution/research track). They play a very important role in the consulting ecosystem because they are the powerhouse of a majority of the knowledge that fuels McKinsey's recommendations. C&I analysts are “staffed” similarly to how consultants are staffed on projects, but they might be staffed more frequently on internal efforts such as developing research papers. However, there is a push for C&I analysts to be on client-facing teams more than internal efforts because they are the liaison to data and insights. 
 

When it comes to the day to day task, C&I analysts are not doing the consultant role – they don't make pages the same way consultants do, or pull insights from numbers. They might be asked to find the numbers and pull together the research that helps consultants crystallize a solution. Therefore, they do tend to have better work life balance than consultants and do not directly interact with clients as often.

If you have further questions about the role differences, feel free to reach out. Some of my closest friends from McKinsey were C&I analysts and I'm happy to share the experiences. 

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