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McKinsey JA role (london)

I got the solve invite for the role, 24 hours after submitting my resume. I have my masters and bachelors in biochemistry(distinctions in both). I do have around 3 analytical internships and recently started working as a research associate at a startup in London, been around 4 months. Do you think its worth giving the solve or no matter how well i do, i will get disqualified due to less experience 

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Tommy
Coach
21 hrs ago
Ex-McKinsey associate and F500 director, experienced coach and mentor

Hello!

Definitely worth it to do the solve. Without knowing more details - your background doesn't sound like it would disqualify you by any means. That being said, it will be crucial your resume highlights the impact you delivered in those internship roles. McK hires a wide variety of backgrounds (from academic and professional settings), and research experience is certainly valued. 

I personally didn't think I'd be considered - but niche skills or backgrounds are more common than you may think compared to traditional business backgrounds.

Hope this helps - feel free to ping as well!

Tommy

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Margot
Coach
20 hrs ago
10% discount for 1st session I Ex-BCG, Accenture & Deloitte Strategist | 6 years in consulting I Free Intro-Call

Hi there,

Yes, it is absolutely worth doing Solve, and no, you will not be disqualified just because of “less experience”.

McKinsey does not send Solve randomly. If you received it 24 hours after applying, your profile clearly passed the initial screen. Your academic background with distinctions, analytical internships, and current role already meet the bar for a Junior Associate profile in London.

If McKinsey had already decided you were too junior or too senior, you would not have received Solve in the first place. The fact that you did means your profile fits the role.

Bottom line: Take Solve seriously and give it your best shot!

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Alessa
Coach
20 hrs ago
MBB Expert | Ex-McKinsey | Ex-BCG | Ex-Roland Berger

Hey! 

Def do it! You will not lose anything in case you dont do it well! 

Let me know if you need tips on how to prepare for the game! (: 

Alessa 

Profile picture of Tyler
Tyler
Coach
12 hrs ago
BCG interviewer | Ex-Accenture Strategy | 6+ years in consulting | Coached many successful candidates in Asia

Hi!

Receiving the Solve invite already shows that your experience aligns with what they are looking for - whether you advance to the interview rounds will be based on how you perform in Solve.

For me, the answer to whether it is worth giving Solve a try is always yes; the real question is whether you're ready for it or not, to maximize your chances of getting to get into the next round. 

  • If yes, go for it and start your case interview prep.
  • If not, I'd try to write back to request an extension - make sure to suggest the extension timeline you're comfortable with. At the same time, prepare for Solve - there are plenty of resources online or coaches here to help with the prep.

Hope this helps - All the best!

Profile picture of Kevin
Kevin
Coach
13 hrs ago
Ex-Bain (London) | Private Equity & M&A | 12+ Yrs Experience | The Reflex Method | Free Intro Call

That rapid 24-hour invite is an excellent signal. It means your resume—specifically your academic distinctions, degree choice, and analytical internships—immediately cleared the initial filters, which are often semi-automated or managed by screeners looking for specific patterns. If they were going to desk-reject you purely on the basis of insufficient experience, they would not have wasted the Solve invite slot.

Here is the reality for the Junior Associate track: they are hiring sharp, analytical raw talent, especially those coming straight out of strong Master’s programs. Your four months at a startup is viewed as a positive analytical proof point, not a disqualifying lack of tenure. You are competing with people fresh out of school, not post-MBA candidates. You cleared the CV gate; now the firm needs to vet your structured problem-solving ability.

Absolutely take the Solve. It is the most critical hurdle between the CV screen and the interview rounds. Focus entirely on preparing for that tool—learn the mechanics, understand the time constraints, and practice the logic flow. Do not disqualify yourself based on phantom concerns; let the process filter you if you fail the test, but go in determined to secure that interview slot.

All the best!

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Jenny
Coach
10 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 should absoluatly take the test. It's not uncommon for them to consider you for a more senior/junior role based on your experiences after passing the test and HR interviews.

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

You should absolutely try and do your best for Solve. 

Basically, it means they have already scanned your application and considered it relevant. So assuming you have a great score on Solve you have a high chance of passing. 

Best of luck!
Cristian