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How to do divisions fast

arithmetic Division math
Bearbeitet am 5. Sept. 2021
4 Antworten
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Anonym A fragte am 23. Aug. 2019

Hi, this is probably a really silly question but I really need to learn a concept to solve problems like these quickly. In solving a case, I was encountered with the ratio 375/125. The answer is 3, but I don't know the multiples of 125 and I'm bad at quickly dividing or multiplying. How would I have done this quicker, assuming that I don't know off the top of my head the times table of 125?

On a similar note, what kind of divisions or multiplication tables should I learn and could you share some resources for these? Much appreciated.

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Marco-Alexander
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bearbeitete eine Antwort am 5. Sept. 2021
Former BCG | Case author for efellows book | Experience in 6 consultancies (Stern Stewart, Capgemini, KPMG, VW Con., Hor

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Vlad
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antwortete am 24. Aug. 2019
McKinsey / Accenture Alum / Got all BIG3 offers / Harvard Business School

Hi,

Simply learn the division table up to 1/11 (i.e. 5/6 = 83.3%). It will help you calculate any percentage problems. For example, if your market is $620M and your revenues are $51M you can use 5/6 as a proxy to calculate the market share

Best!

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Francesco
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bearbeitete eine Antwort am 16. Juni 2020
#1 Coach for Sessions (4.500+) | 1.500+ 5-Star Reviews | Proven Success (➡ interviewoffers.com) | Ex BCG | 10Y+ Coaching

Hi Anonymous,

one way to deal with divisions like the one you presented is to reduce both the numbers in the division by a factor of 10.

In your specific case, if you divide by 10 both, you get 37.5/12.5. You can probably easily figure out the first number of the result should be around 3. You can then multiply 12.5 times 3 and verify it is indeed 37.5.

In terms of general math tips, this is what I would recommend:

  1. Use correctly 10^ powers in your math computation. For example 3.2B/723M can be transformed in 3200*10^6/732*10^6, which makes it easier to deal with math
  2. Ask if it is fine to approximate. When you have to deal with math in market sizing, and sometimes even in business cases, you are allowed to approximate math to simplify the computation. In the previous example, for instance, you could transform the computation in 320*10^7/73*10^7, making the overall computation faster.
  3. Keep good notes. One of the reasons people do mistakes with big numbers is that they don't keep their notes in order, thus forget/misreport numbers
  4. Divide complex math in smaller logical steps. This is something you can use for big numbers after the application of the 10^ power mentioned above. If you have to compute (96*39)*10^6, you can divide the first element in 96*40 - 96*1 = 100*40 - 4*40 - 96*1 = 4000 – 160 – 100 + 4 = 3744*10^6
  5. Use shortcuts for fractions. You can learn by heart fractions and thus speed up/simplify the computation - the most useful to know are 1/6, 1/7, 1/8, 1/9.

Finally, in terms of practice before the interview I would recommend to practice math under pressure - not just math. Many candidates are totally fine with calculating 67% of 67 in a quiet environment, but freeze if you ask this suddenly in a case interview.

To practice for this, try always to use a timer with a strict time constraint when you practice math – this will create pressure and help to replicate the actual environment of the interview.

Hope this helps,

Francesco

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Anonym B antwortete am 23. Aug. 2019

Hi,

accuracy and communication (meaning explaining to your interviewer what you calculate and why in a very clear and concise way) are the two areas you should focus on rather than speed. In fact, applying super fancy mental math tricks is rather detrimental than useful in a case interview, because the interviewer most likely will not be able to follow your thoughts.

Therefore, yes, you should get more comfortable with dividing/multiplying, but please don't learn any tables or fancy math shortcuts by heart.

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Marco-Alexander

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