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Practice with Coaches

When preparing for a case interview, especially under time constraints, working with an experienced coach can significantly enhance your chances of success.

💡 Pro Tip: PrepLounge offers access to over 800 (former) management consultants from top firms like McKinsey, BCG, and Bain, who are ready to help you perfect your interview technique.

What Are the Key Advantages of Practicing With a Coach?

Key Advantages of Practicing With a Coach

Personalized Feedback

One of the primary benefits of working with a case coach is receiving tailored feedback. Unlike general preparation methods, a coach can pinpoint your specific weaknesses and provide actionable advice to improve. This personalized approach ensures that your preparation is efficient and targeted, addressing your unique needs and challenges.

Realistic Simulation

Practicing with a coach allows you to experience a realistic interview setting. Coaches who have conducted numerous case interviews can replicate the pressure and dynamics of a real interview, helping you become more comfortable and confident. This experience is invaluable, as it prepares you to handle the stress and spontaneity of actual interviews.

Insider Knowledge

Experienced coaches often come from prestigious consulting backgrounds themselves. Their insider knowledge about what top firms are looking for can give you a significant edge. They can share insights about the interview process, common pitfalls, and the specific attributes that firms value, ensuring that you are well-prepared to meet these expectations.

Structured Approach

A coach can help you develop a structured approach to solving case problems. This structured thinking is crucial in case interviews, where clear, logical, and well-organized answers are highly valued. Coaches can teach you frameworks and methodologies that streamline your problem-solving process, making your responses more coherent and compelling.

Time Efficiency

For candidates with limited preparation time, coaching is a highly efficient way to get ready. Coaches can quickly identify areas that need improvement, helping you focus your efforts where they are most needed. This targeted preparation can save you time and help you progress faster than you would on your own.

Confidence Boost

Confidence plays a crucial role in interview performance. Regular practice with a coach can boost your confidence by familiarizing you with the interview format and helping you refine your answers. Knowing that you have prepared thoroughly with expert guidance can significantly reduce anxiety and improve your overall performance.

 

How PrepLounge Optimally Supports You With a Wide Range of Coaching Options

🚀 Flexibility and Convenience

PrepLounge offers a variety of coaching options to fit your needs and preferences. You can choose from individual sessions, CV reviews, or comprehensive coaching packages that include multiple sessions or focus on specific topics. Additionally, there are programs available that combine a premium membership with coaching credits, providing a cost-effective way to access top-notch coaching services.

📅 Workshops and Online Events

PrepLounge also regularly hosts workshops and online events led by experienced coaches. These sessions cover a range of topics and provide opportunities for interactive learning and direct feedback. Participating in these events can further enhance your preparation and keep you updated on the latest trends and techniques in case interviews.

 

How to Find the Perfect Coach to Suit Your Needs

To find the perfect coach for your case interview preparation, you can proceed in three steps within the coach overview:

How to Find the Perfect Coach to Suit Your Needs
  1. Filtering: Begin by filtering the coaches based on your most important criteria, such as price per coaching session, or employer.
  2. Selection: Choose up to 10 coaches whose profiles, ratings, Q&A contributions, and PrepLounge awards you wish to explore further.
  3. Contacting: Reach out to 2-3 coaches to address any potential questions or concerns about their coaching approach. Feel free to ask if they offer a free intro call.

 

What Makes a Good Coach?

Good coaches are characterized by the following features:

  • Customization: they tailor the coaching to your specific needs.
  • Good rapport: They make you feel comfortable and work well with them.
  • Transparency: They offer you full transparency about the coaching process on PrepLounge.

 

Final Thoughts on Working With a Coach

Practicing with a coach is a strategic investment in your case interview preparation. The personalized feedback, realistic simulation, insider knowledge, and confidence boost that coaches provide can make a significant difference in your performance. With the expert guidance available on PrepLounge, you can ensure that you are thoroughly prepared and ready to excel in your case interviews.

By leveraging the expertise of experienced case coaches and taking advantage of the diverse coaching options and events available on PrepLounge, you can maximize your preparation efficiency, build your confidence, and increase your chances of securing a position at a top consulting firm.

 

Take a Look at Our Coaches

Florian
Florian
5.0
644 Reviews
English, German
Austria (UTC +2)
Florian
Consulting
1600 5-star reviews across platforms | 700+ offers | Highest-rated case book on Amazon | Uni lecturer in US, Asia, EU
1600 5-star reviews across platforms | 700+ offers | Highest-rated case book on Amazon | Uni lecturer in US, Asia, EU
English, German
Austria (UTC +2)
USD 399 / hour
1,450 Coachings
40,217 Q&A Upvotes
199 Awards
USD 399 / hour
Francesco
Francesco
5.0
1,713 Reviews
English, Italian, Spanish
United Arab Emirates (UTC +4)
Francesco
Consulting
#1 Coach for Sessions (4.500+) | 1.500+ 5-Star Reviews | Proven Success: ➡ interviewoffers.com | Ex BCG | 10Y+ Coaching
#1 Coach for Sessions (4.500+) | 1.500+ 5-Star Reviews | Proven Success: ➡ interviewoffers.com | Ex BCG | 10Y+ Coaching
English, Italian, Spanish
United Arab Emirates (UTC +4)
USD 999 / hour
4,729 Coachings
59,496 Q&A Upvotes
489 Awards
USD 999 / hour
Hagen
Hagen
5.0
1,170 Reviews
English, German
Germany (UTC +2)
Hagen
Consulting
Premium + Coaching
Globally top-ranked MBB coach | >95% success rate | 9+ years consulting, interviewing and coaching experience
Globally top-ranked MBB coach | >95% success rate | 9+ years consulting, interviewing and coaching experience
English, German
Germany (UTC +2)
USD 329 / hour
1,509 Coachings
41,840 Q&A Upvotes
198 Awards
USD 329 / hour
Casper
Casper
5.0
208 Reviews
English, Polish
Philippines (UTC +8)
Casper
Consulting
Premium + Coaching
1st session: -50% | Ex-Bain, Big 4 Recruiter | 12 yrs coaching | Great Price/Value | Free Intro Calls | Written Cases
1st session: -50% | Ex-Bain, Big 4 Recruiter | 12 yrs coaching | Great Price/Value | Free Intro Calls | Written Cases
English, Polish
Philippines (UTC +8)
USD 189 / hour
1,163 Coachings
8 Q&A Upvotes
68 Awards
USD 189 / hour
Cristian
Cristian
5.0
381 Reviews
English
Germany (UTC +2)
Cristian
Consulting
Most awarded MBB coach on the platform | verified 88% success rate | ex-McKinsey | Oxford | worked with ~400 candidates
Most awarded MBB coach on the platform | verified 88% success rate | ex-McKinsey | Oxford | worked with ~400 candidates
English
Germany (UTC +2)
USD 289 / hour
1,068 Coachings
58,766 Q&A Upvotes
233 Awards
USD 289 / hour
Benjamin
Benjamin
5.0
91 Reviews
English
Singapore (UTC +8)
Benjamin
Consulting
Premium + Coaching
Ex-BCG Principal | 8+ years consulting experience in SEA | BCG top interviewer & top performer
Ex-BCG Principal | 8+ years consulting experience in SEA | BCG top interviewer & top performer
English
Singapore (UTC +8)
USD 279 / hour
570 Coachings
15,272 Q&A Upvotes
83 Awards
USD 279 / hour
Tommaso
Tommaso
5.0
5 Reviews
English, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish
Spain (UTC +1)
Tommaso
Consulting
Ex-McKinsey | MBA @ Berkeley Haas | No-nonsense coaching | 50% off on 1st meeting in April (DM me for discount code!)
Ex-McKinsey | MBA @ Berkeley Haas | No-nonsense coaching | 50% off on 1st meeting in April (DM me for discount code!)
English, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish
Spain (UTC +1)
USD 149 / hour
7 Coachings
679 Q&A Upvotes
0 Awards
USD 149 / hour
Vincent
Vincent
5.0
1 Review
English, German
Switzerland (UTC +2)
Vincent
Consulting
Principal BCG | 60+ projects in all Industries | Munich & Zürich | Ex-Lazard & Berenberg
Principal BCG | 60+ projects in all Industries | Munich & Zürich | Ex-Lazard & Berenberg
English, German
Switzerland (UTC +2)
USD 199 / hour
1 Coaching
37 Q&A Upvotes
0 Awards
USD 199 / hour
Thabang
Thabang
5.0
177 Reviews
English
United Kingdom (UTC +2)
Thabang
Consulting
Top Rated McKinsey Coach | Ex-McKinsey | Top MBB Coach |
Top Rated McKinsey Coach | Ex-McKinsey | Top MBB Coach |
English
United Kingdom (UTC +2)
USD 199 / hour
411 Coachings
6,811 Q&A Upvotes
20 Awards
USD 199 / hour
Margot
Margot
5.0
28 Reviews
English, French, German, Italian
Germany (UTC +2)
Margot
Consulting
Premium + Coaching
10% discount for 1st session I Ex-BCG, Accenture & Deloitte Strategist | 7 years in consulting I Free Intro-Call
10% discount for 1st session I Ex-BCG, Accenture & Deloitte Strategist | 7 years in consulting I Free Intro-Call
English, French, German, Italian
Germany (UTC +2)
USD 189 / hour
82 Coachings
2,071 Q&A Upvotes
13 Awards
USD 189 / hour

Browse Through the Coaching Packages

Graphic with the headline 'Path to Consulting Package – 5 Sessions'. Includes a photo of Coach Cristian and a note about a full library of practice materials.
Path to Consulting Package
Path to Consulting Package
5.0
27 Reviews
5 tailored sessions
Personal fit & case mastery
First principles thinking
5 tailored sessions
Personal fit & case mastery
First principles thinking
“The 1% Case Method” coaching program by Dr. Florian Smeritschnig, ex-McKinsey. Chess-themed visual promoting custom prep for top consulting offers.
The 1% Case Method
The 1% Case Method
5.0
63 Reviews
Intuitive Case and Fit Mastery
Unparalleled Offer Rates
$1,877 Bonus Practice Materials
Intuitive Case and Fit Mastery
Unparalleled Offer Rates
$1,877 Bonus Practice Materials
Prepped and Primed 3’ coaching program by Ian – a hand holds an empty Polaroid frame in front of a nature scene with cliffs and water.
Prepped and Primed 3
Prepped and Primed 3
5.0
31 Reviews
3 1-on-1 Coaching Sessions
Fully tailored and customized
100+ video course included
3 1-on-1 Coaching Sessions
Fully tailored and customized
100+ video course included

Find Interesting Insights From Coaches in the Q&A

How to deal with long working hours?
2 hrs
< 100
8
Profile picture of Ian
Best answer by
Ian
BCG was the best experience I never want to have again. If I went back in time, I would 100% do it again. But I will never do it again in this lifetime. It's the marines. You become your best professional self there. The training, the learning, the network, the brand, the experience, the people. It's up to you to decide if it's worth it.   I highly recommend you read my consulting survival guide Here are a couple of snippets from that guide, based on what you've said: 1) This job is inherently stressful, and you are not going to be the first person to struggle with stress. Consulting firms have mechanisms in place to try to keep consultants from burning out. If you are struggling, reach out early. 2) You need comrades - your people for the really good and the really garbage days. Find them and stick to them. 3) There will always be pressure, but not every task will make or break the bank. If the success or failure of the project relies solely on the one slide you're making, there are bigger issues going on. 4) Keep a one-page version of the case story up-to-date every couple of days. 5) Always bring solutions, not problems. 6)You learn so much more when you are fully transparent about what you don't understand. 7) You will do your best work once you are okay with being fired. 8) Your Project Lead/Principal is not inside your head. Learn how to communicate and guide their attention to what they need to know. Work to their style and your life will be easier. 9) You have to stand up for yourself. And people will respect you for it (98% of the time). 10) People's perception of your performance is just as important as your performance. 11) Communication is as important as content. Communication isn't what you say, it's what they hear. 12) Being good at the qualitative aspects of consulting (presentation, communication etc.) is significantly more important than being good at the analysis/excel/quantitative side of consulting. 13) Consulting is a confidence game. Always have a strong opinion, lightly held.
View Q&A
Do MBB & tier-2 firms (EY-P, Kearney, Oliver Wymann) differ a lot country to country in terms of hiring standards?
2 hrs
< 100
9
Profile picture of Patrick
Best answer by
Patrick
If you mean the process — they can differ in the details but not in the overall process. You'll always need to do cases and some personal fit interview, but they can differ for example in the number of interviews or whether they add an upfront online test or not.If you mean the quality of profiles they are hiring — officially they do not differ. They look for the same profile, toolset and qualities - the job is very similar across countries. However, there can be differences due to: Country-specific requirements — the main ones being language and visa, but there might also be preferences for certain educational or work paths. Example: In France, they seem to prefer profiles from the Grande École education system, while in Germany grades take higher importance than specific universities. Demand-supply balance — countries might have an imbalance in supply and demand of applicants, making it at least statistically (and potentially perceptionally) harder or easier to land a job. Example: Switzerland is notoriously hard as a German or French speaker despite both speaking a local language, but the country is small and supply of applications is high; Middle East and Africa have had more demand for people than locally available in recent years, so a lot of foreigners landed jobs there (whether that lowered the barrier would be a heated discussion😉). Different positions — there are roles and programs specific to a country. In some countries you can more easily find a job in consulting after just a bachelor's degree, while in others they require a master's — the difference is they offer entry roles at the respective level.I would say in most cases you have the best odds in your home country as that's what most prefer, but there are exceptions in certain situations or countries where you might have a good chance.Hence, for a more nuanced answer, we would have to look at your specific situation and the countries you consider.
View Q&A
Australian undergraduate student looking for help
2 hrs
< 100
9
Profile picture of Alessandro
Best answer by
Alessandro
Hi, good profile and good timing with January still a few months out. On the coach question, here is how I would think about it. 1. A coach is not necessary, but it is the highest-leverage thing you can buy if used correctly Self-prep gets you to 70% of the way. The last 30% (pressure handling, structure quality under stress, communication polish) is hard to self-diagnose because the gap is invisible to you. That is what a coach fixes. With January as your target, you have the runway to use one well 2. Use a coach for diagnosis first, not volume Do not buy 10 sessions upfront. Buy 1 to 2 sessions with an ex-MBB coach for a full mock + structured feedback. Ask them to rank your gaps (structure, math, synthesis, communication, presence). Then decide if you need more. Most candidates need 4 to 6 sessions total, not 15 3. Before the first paid session, do this 15 to 20 cases with peers on PrepLounge (free, and partner quality is high enough at this stage) Record yourself on 3 cases and rewatch. You will spot 50% of your issues without paying anyone Drill mental math daily (Rocket Blocks or similar), 15 minutes, non-negotiable This way your paid sessions go to fixing real gaps, not basics you can fix alone 4. On the EY-PS rejection, do a post-mortem Write down every question they asked, your answer, and what you would do differently. That document is worth more than 2 coaching sessions. Pattern recognition from your own failures is the cheapest improvement available 5. BCG chatbot prep is different from case prep The Casey/Pymetrics style assessment tests structured thinking under digital constraints, not live case skill. Practice on the official BCG sample and Casey replicas. Do not over-prepare, it is a screen, not the bar Net: peer prep + self-recording + 2 diagnostic coach sessions in November, then decide. With your GPA and timeline, you are well positioned Happy to answer follow-ups  
View Q&A
Cover Letter
2 hrs
< 100
6
Profile picture of Alessandro
Best answer by
Alessandro
Hi, happy to share a few tips that work well for RB specifically. 1. Lead with the "why RB" in the first line, not the last Most candidates open with "I am a X year student at Y university applying for Z." Skip it. Open with the specific reason you want Roland Berger over MBB or Big 4. RB readers screen for genuine interest because they lose too many candidates to MBB late in the process. One sharp sentence on what attracts you to their European heritage, their industrial/automotive depth, or a specific recent study they published goes a long way 2. Structure the body in 3 paragraphs, each with one proof point Paragraph 1: why consulting (one experience that proves you have tested it, not just read about it) Paragraph 2: why RB specifically (a project, a partner you met at an event, a sector focus) Paragraph 3: why you (one quantified achievement that shows analytical rigor or leadership, not a list) One proof per paragraph. No CV repetition. The reader already has your CV next to the letter 3. Quantify everything you can "Led a team" is weak. "Led a team of 5 to deliver a market entry analysis for a EUR 2M client in 6 weeks" is strong. RB screeners are ex-consultants, they read for numbers and outcomes 4. Cut every adjective "Highly motivated", "passionate", "dynamic" add zero signal. Replace with a fact that proves the trait. If you cannot prove it, drop it 5. One page, 4 paragraphs max, no walls of text Aim for 250 to 300 words total. Recruiters spend 30 seconds on a cover letter. Make every line earn its place Happy to review a draft if you want a second pair of eyes  
View Q&A
How to effectively structure a case?
2 hrs
< 100
4
Profile picture of Alessandro
Best answer by
Alessandro
Good question, and your diagnosis is already half the answer. The fix is a discipline to anchor the tree to the actual question asked. Three things that helped my candidates the most: 1. Start from the objective equation, not from drivers Before writing any branch, restate the objective as a math equation. "Grow revenue from existing customers" = # customers retained × ARPU. That single line forces you to stay inside the revenue engine and rules out competitor/product branches that do not map to the equation. If the branch does not multiply or add into the objective, it does not belong in the first level 2. Use 2 trees, not 1, and pick consciously Profitability tree when the question is quantitative and the equation is clean (revenue, cost, margin) Root-cause tree when the question is diagnostic ("why is X happening") and you need market, competitor, internal lenses The low-cost entrant case is a root-cause case dressed as a margin case. Structure: why is margin dropping (price vs cost vs mix) → then why is price dropping (competitor move, customer switching, channel pressure). Profitability first, root-cause second, nested 3. Drill: 20 prompts, 3 minutes each, structure only Take 20 prompt one-liners from Casebook or PrepLounge. For each, write only the equation and first-level branches in 3 minutes. No second level, no analysis. Do 5 per day for a week. You will stop reaching for templates because you will have built the muscle of deriving level 1 from the objective itself The second level comes naturally once level 1 is tight. Most weak trees are weak at the top, not the bottom. Happy to review a few of your trees if useful
View Q&A
My biggest fear
3 hrs
100+
10
Profile picture of Franco
Best answer by
Franco
Hi, I spent nearly 10 years at BCG in the Milan office, so let me give you my very honest view;: Working hours: yes, you do work a lot. Southern European offices, including Italy, tend to be on the tougher side in terms of hours compared to other regions in Europe (especially the Nordics). That said, it varies a lot depending on the client, your team (PL/EM), and the partner. In my experience, long hours were more noticeable when working from the home office; when on client site, it often felt less heavy as you’re fully immersed and there’s not much else going on anyway. Team environment: this is where I’d push back on some of the negative narratives. I’ve never experienced colleagues as competitors. There is a strong sense of camaraderie; if you’re overloaded, people step in and help. You’re all in the same boat. The pressure doesn’t come from internal competition, but from the fact that you’re constantly evaluated; performance reviews determine promotions, progression, and compensation. There are many factors to consider, but the fact that I stayed for 10 years should tell you something; for me, the positives clearly outweighed the downsides. If you want to go deeper, feel free to reach out. Best, Franco
View Q&A
How important is LinkedIn for MBB?
3 hrs
200+
11
Profile picture of Mauro
Best answer by
Mauro
Short answer: LinkedIn doesn’t matter much for MBB screening. Applications are primarily based on: your CV your academic performance referrals (if any) Recruiters don’t systematically evaluate candidates based on how strong or “polished” their LinkedIn is. So a great profile won’t compensate for a weaker CV, and a simple profile won’t hurt you if your CV is strong. What you’re observing with Aspire is a bit different. Programs like that are: more selective more branding-oriented sometimes influenced by visibility and engagement So it can feel like people with strong LinkedIn presence are overrepresented, but that’s not the core driver in standard recruiting. If anything, LinkedIn is useful for: networking (reaching out to consultants) getting referrals understanding firms better But it’s not a selection criterion in itself. If you didn’t pass screening, I would focus much more on: CV clarity and impact positioning / narrative potentially referrals rather than LinkedIn. So don’t worry — you don’t need a “personal brand” to get into MBB. A strong, well-crafted CV matters far more.
View Q&A
Dual Degree Value for Recruitment
3 hrs
100+
10
Profile picture of Virginia
Best answer by
Virginia
Both coaches nailed it so I won't repeat the "it depends on what you do with it" point. But one thing I'd add from the engineering side specifically, the biggest value isn't the signal it sends to recruiters. It's that engineering genuinely changes how you approach case interviews and consulting work. You get comfortable with ambiguity in quantitative problems, you learn to break systems down into components, and you develop intuition for when numbers feel wrong. That stuff is harder lo learn later on vs. business fundamentals. The main thing to watch: a dual degree where your GPA tanks below 3.5 is worse than a single degree with a 3.9. The workload is real, so make sure you can keep your grades strong and do the internships, extracurriculars, etc. 
View Q&A
Daily Rate vs Season Pass pricing
5 hrs
< 100
3
Profile picture of Tommaso
Best answer by
Tommaso
Hey, Your doubt is logically correct, and you actually spotted something that sounds weird: if the average visits are 10 a year, why are customers spending 1200$ for unlimited visits rather than just 800$ (i.e., 10 times the $80 single entry ticket)? However, the reality is that it is not uncommon in this type of businesses to see these situations. People often overestimate how often they will use a season pass. Let's use these assumptions:  A few season ticket holders might do only 1-2 visits a year (e.g., they move to another country, they get hurt early in the season, they get too busy with work). Let's say 15-20% A few others might get close to the 8 "threshold" (say 6-7 visits): when you buy the season pass, you definitely expect you'll ski much more than you actually can (even without injuries or work issues). Let's say 40-45% Lastly, a few others will get their full worth of 15-20 visits. Let's say roughly the top 40% If you compute the numbers above, you'll see that (0.18 × 1.5) + (0.42 × 6.5) + (0.40 × 17.5) = 10.0 average visits. We can discuss of whether my percentage assumptions are correct or not: I picked on purpose some numbers that would yield a 10.0 average to be consistent with the case (and I agree with you: the true average might be slightly higher than 10). However, you can see how we are not too far from a real-case scenario! Hope this helps! Tom  
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