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Post-MBA MBB Experienced Hire

Unfortunately, I didn't secure any offers from MBB during second year FT recruiting at a T-10 MBA program. I was waitlisted at one and received rejections from the other two firms after interviews.

I'll be joining a T-2 consultancy post-graduation and plan to work hard there for ~1-2 years, but still have a desire to eventually apply again for MBB.

Is re-recruiting as an experienced hire a realistic path? If so, what would be an appropriate timeline for applying again and what would be the most effective strategies for building my candidacy?

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Hagen
Coach
bearbeitet am 28. Okt. 2024
#1 recommended coach | >95% success rate | 8+ years consulting, 8+ years coaching and 7+ years interviewing experience

Hi there,

First of all, congratulations on the offer, despite the rejections and being waitlisted from MBB!

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

  • First of all, you may consider reapplying after about a year.
  • Moreover, however, I would highly advise you to wait and see how you like working at your future employer before committing yourself to MBB. I know quite a few people with the same plan who ended up liking their "second choice" much more and stayed for good.

You can find more on this topic here: How to deal with a rejection from a consulting company.

If you would like a more detailed discussion on your specific situation, please don't hesitate to contact me directly.

Best,

Hagen

Thabang
Coach
am 16. Jan. 2025
Ex-McKinsey Consultant | McKinsey Top Coach & Interviewer | Special Offer: Buy 1 Session Get 1 Free (Limited time!)

Hey there,

The short answer is: yes, it's realistic to re-apply to MBB. How soon you can re-apply depends on how soon the MBB will accept the re-application and the stage in the recruiting journey that you didn't make it through. 

For example, if it was at screening stage, you may need more time at the T2 to demonstrate significant improvements and relevant experience. If it was at a test stage or interviews, it could be anything between 12 months and 18 months. 
 

It's always best to speak directly with recruiters to understand timeline implications and requirements for re-application too. There are lots of variations amongst MBBs, regions, practices and also economic cycles

All the best

Dennis
Coach
am 27. Okt. 2024
Roland Berger|Project Manager and Recruiter|7+ years of consulting experience in USA and Europe

Hi there,

congrats on your T2 offer. It is very common for consultants to transition from a T2 company to MBB somewhere down the line (the other direction is rather unusual). 

I would at least give it 2 years of consulting experience before you attempt a re-application. That way you'll be already seasoned enough and have some "war stories" to share. Better yet though, you wait until you have some form of specialization that might be interesting for MBB.

However, you should just focus on your current firm for the time being and not already think years ahead day-dreaming about greener pastures at MBB. Because after all, you might

  • find out that you actually like the company and client environment at your T2 firm and you'll be given plenty of opportunities to grow
  • determine for yourself that consulting is actually not your cup of tea and you rather want to focus on something else
  • 2+ years of consulting workload and sacrifice of your personal life will have been enough for you to pursue a different direction in your career

So with all that said, in summary: No, your dream of MBB is not dead. But there is also little reason to make that your primary objective at this point in time.

Best of luck

am 27. Okt. 2024
Ex-BCG Project Leader (Energy + Climate & Sustainability) | Experienced Interviewer

Great insights from Brian and Dennis. 

One quick add: ideal timing depends on hiring needs. I’d keep connections at the firms warm (e.g., note to recruiters expressing interest in reapplying, to your connections on where you landed and thanking them for the help) and wait at least a year before asking about the timing of experienced hire applications/interviews.

Experienced hires are reviewed on a rolling basis, but that doesn’t mean you should apply whenever and hope to make it work. Recruiting teams will only spend the time on this part of the pipeline when business need picks up and requires additional headcount beyond existing staff and planned starts. 

For now, focus on crushing it at your job and developing the skillset that will make you a successful consultant.

Udayan
Coach
am 27. Okt. 2024
Top rated Case & PEI coach/Multiple real offers/McKinsey EM in New York /12 years recruiting experience

Yes - it is a very realistic path to be hired as an experienced consultant, depending on where you will be working and what your expertise is likely to be. If you specialize in skills/sectors that are in high demand and build a good reputation you will have a great shot at MBB.

In terms of timeline - At least 2+ years to build credibility around your story about what you can bring to the role once you transition.

Brian
Coach
am 27. Okt. 2024
3+ years in McKinsey as an Associate and JEM | Free intro calls | Interviewed 40+ CAs to Associates (MBA-level)

1 year in T2 is enough to reapply again; but it will be helpful if you can share why you were rejected in the first place. e.g., Case study performance, resume strength etc. I'm assuming it is the former.

Re-recruiting is a perfectly realistic path. Focus on doing your job well (develop consulting competencies) + case/behavioral prep + source for referrals from your MBA counterparts who are in MBB

Florian
Coach
am 28. Okt. 2024
1400 5-star reviews across platforms | 600+ offers | Highest-rated case book on Amazon | Uni lecturer in US, Asia, EU

Hi there,

Great plan!

I would say, 12-18 months would be a good timeline to reapply:

  • You can demonstrate significant improvements on your resume by then
  • The market will hopefully be in a better shape
  • You have time to network with active MBB consultants for networking
  • You have significantly improved your problem-solving skills, analytics, and communication by then
  • You have better stories to tell during the fit

All the best,

Florian

Alberto
Coach
am 28. Okt. 2024
Ex-McKinsey AP | +13 yrs hiring top talent | I help you think, speak & perform like a real consultant (95% success)

That depends on your profile and in which part of the processes you were rejected.

If you were not invited to the process, work on your resume with a professional coach or another consultant.

If you failed during the interviews but you showed potential, MBB will normally call you back.

If you failed big time in round 1, chances are very low.

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