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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

Francesco
Francesco
5.0
1,708 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
4,725 Coachings
59,444 Q&A Upvotes
486 Awards
USD 999 / hour
Hagen
Hagen
5.0
1,149 Reviews
English, German
Germany (UTC +1)
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 +1)
USD 329 / hour
1,471 Coachings
41,727 Q&A Upvotes
195 Awards
USD 329 / hour
Florian
Florian
5.0
636 Reviews
English, German
Austria (UTC +1)
Florian
Consulting
1500 5-star reviews across platforms | 700+ offers | Highest-rated case book on Amazon | Uni lecturer in US, Asia, EU
1500 5-star reviews across platforms | 700+ offers | Highest-rated case book on Amazon | Uni lecturer in US, Asia, EU
English, German
Austria (UTC +1)
USD 399 / hour
1,431 Coachings
40,195 Q&A Upvotes
197 Awards
USD 399 / hour
Casper
Casper
5.0
207 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 179 / hour
1,124 Coachings
8 Q&A Upvotes
67 Awards
USD 179 / hour
Cristian
Cristian
5.0
372 Reviews
English
Germany (UTC +1)
Cristian
Consulting
Most awarded coach | Ex-McKinsey | Verifiable 88% offer rate (annual report) | First-principles cases + PEI storylining
Most awarded coach | Ex-McKinsey | Verifiable 88% offer rate (annual report) | First-principles cases + PEI storylining
English
Germany (UTC +1)
USD 379 / hour
1,055 Coachings
56,932 Q&A Upvotes
228 Awards
USD 379 / hour
Alberto
Alberto
5.0
77 Reviews
English, Spanish
Spain (UTC +1)
Alberto
Consulting
Ex-McKinsey AP | Professional MBB Coach | +13yrs experience | +2,000 real interviews | +150 offers
Ex-McKinsey AP | Professional MBB Coach | +13yrs experience | +2,000 real interviews | +150 offers
English, Spanish
Spain (UTC +1)
USD 699 / hour
306 Coachings
11,455 Q&A Upvotes
90 Awards
USD 699 / hour
Alessandro
Alessandro
5.0
10 Reviews
English, Indonesian, Italian
Indonesia (UTC +7)
Alessandro
Consulting
McKinsey Senior Engagement Manager | Interviewer Lead | 1,000+ real MBB interviews | 2026 Solve, PEI, AI-case specialist
McKinsey Senior Engagement Manager | Interviewer Lead | 1,000+ real MBB interviews | 2026 Solve, PEI, AI-case specialist
English, Indonesian, Italian
Indonesia (UTC +7)
USD 199 / hour
12 Coachings
2,334 Q&A Upvotes
4 Awards
USD 199 / hour
Agrim
Agrim
5.0
67 Reviews
English
United Arab Emirates (UTC +4)
Agrim
Consulting
Finance
ELITE Prep | BCG Dubai Project Leader | Top Coach | 3hrs Case Mastery | 10y+ Consulting | Free Counselling
ELITE Prep | BCG Dubai Project Leader | Top Coach | 3hrs Case Mastery | 10y+ Consulting | Free Counselling
English
United Arab Emirates (UTC +4)
USD 329 / hour
530 Coachings
7,214 Q&A Upvotes
143 Awards
USD 329 / hour
Jimmy
Jimmy
5.0
3 Reviews
English
United Arab Emirates (UTC +4)
Jimmy
Consulting
Premium + Coaching
McKinsey Associate Partner (7 Years) | McKinsey Recruiter | 500+ Interviews | INSEAD MBA
McKinsey Associate Partner (7 Years) | McKinsey Recruiter | 500+ Interviews | INSEAD MBA
English
United Arab Emirates (UTC +4)
USD 149 / hour
9 Coachings
298 Q&A Upvotes
0 Awards
USD 149 / hour
Thabang
Thabang
5.0
176 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
396 Coachings
6,810 Q&A Upvotes
19 Awards
USD 199 / 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
62 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

Incoming Bain - Should I join PEG right away?
25 min
< 100
6
Profile picture of Franco
Best answer by
Franco
Hi, First of all, congratulations on the Bain offer. In my view, the difference between starting in GP vs PEG for the first few months is pretty small. If your goal is to move to PE in 3–4 years, what really matters is that you accumulate a critical mass of due diligence and PE-related work over time, not whether your first few months are in GP or PEG. Doing ~6 months in GP can actually be beneficial because it helps you build broader consulting fundamentals (structuring, problem solving, communication across industries). Those skills will be very useful when you later work on PE cases. As long as you move into PEG relatively early and start building exposure to due diligences, you will still be well positioned for PE exits. Also keep in mind that in many Bain offices, staffing is quite fluid, and people often work on PEG projects even if they are not formally “in PEG” yet. So I would not over-optimize the first few months. Focus instead on: becoming a strong consultant quickly getting exposure to due diligences within the first 1–2 years building relationships with PEG partners and managers That combination matters much more for PE recruiting than whether you start in PEG from day one. Hope this helps. Franco
View Q&A
Background Check - Entrepreneurship Experience
39 min
< 100
5
Profile picture of Franco
Best answer by
Franco
Hi, I wouldn’t worry too much. It is generally understood that founders often start working on a startup well before the legal entity is formally incorporated. That, by itself, does not make your resume inaccurate. In my view, the main thing they want to verify is simply that the startup activity was real and that you were not inventing the experience.  As long as you have been transparent and consistent in explaining that the work started as a startup project before formal incorporation, and that the company entity was only created later, I do not see this as a major issue. Best, Franco
View Q&A
What are the layoff figures across all Middle East consulting firms?
46 min
< 100
3
Profile picture of Alessa
Best answer by
Alessa
Hello :) There are no reliable public layoff figures for consulting firms in the Middle East. In general, the region has seen far fewer layoffs than the US or Europe because demand for consulting, especially in government transformation, energy, and large scale projects, has remained strong. MBB and most Tier 2 firms have mainly slowed hiring or been more selective rather than doing large layoffs. Big4 firms have adjusted teams in some areas but are still expanding in many practices. Overall the Middle East market is still considered one of the more stable consulting regions. Happy to help if you have any other questions. Best, Alessa :)
View Q&A
Is Operations Consulting demand increasing more than Strategy Consulting? How is career in these two fields, nature of work and business exposure? Which teaches more about entreprenuership?
2 hrs
< 100
2
Profile picture of Ian
Best answer by
Ian
Hi there, Three questions, quick answers. On demand — yes, operations/implementation work is growing faster than pure strategy broadly. It's stickier, more recurring, less cyclical. That said, MBB still skews heavily strategy. If you're looking at Accenture, Deloitte, Big 4 strategy arms — operations is a much bigger share of the work. On career comparison — strategy puts you closer to senior leadership, faster at more companies, with a strong "so what" instinct. You're recommending. Operations puts you closer to how things actually work, deeper in execution, with more real world credibility. You're making things happen. Neither is better. They build genuinely different skills. On entrepreneurship — honestly, neither teaches it as much as people expect. Entrepreneurship is about building from scratch with your own capital at risk. Consulting gives you structured thinking, cross industry pattern recognition, discipline under pressure — all useful. But it's not the same thing. If I had to pick: strategy builds the big picture thinking useful early on; operations builds the execution muscle you actually need to run something. The real question isn't which is in more demand. It's which builds the skills you personally want. For what consulting life actually looks like before you commit: Pros and Cons of Working at a Top Consulting Firm. And search The Consulting Offer Blueprint on Spotify or Apple Podcasts — I go deep on exactly this kind of career question there.
View Q&A
How do Post-MBA Expert Track Interviews Compare?
2 hrs
< 100
3
Profile picture of Ian
Best answer by
Ian
Hi there, Short answer: yes, you still need to case prep. Expert Track interviews at MBB still include cases. The difference is the firm expects your domain expertise to show up inside the case... so if the prompt touches M&A, financial modeling, or operational transformation, you're expected to move through those parts with a fluency a generalist doesn't have. The fundamentals are the same. The bar is just higher where it counts for you. Structure-wise, it's broadly similar to generalist. What shifts is the fit component: it tilts heavily toward "why are you the expert?" and "why consulting over staying in finance?" That story needs to be tight. Now the real question: is it worth going down this road if Expert Track is the only reason? Honest answer: the odds are low. Not zero... but these roles are niche, hiring cycles are less predictable than generalist, and the pipeline is smaller. That said, supply and demand actually works in your favor. Fewer people with IB and in house finance backgrounds competing for exactly what MBB needs in this space. So if you genuinely want the work, go for it. But first pressure-test whether Expert Track is really the only path to where you want to go. Expert Track Partner or CFO... there are multiple routes there. Worth getting right before you commit to a prep grind. Worth a read before you decide: https://www.preplounge.com/en/blog/consulting/career/pros-and-cons-of-working-at-a-top-consulting-firm For case prep when you're ready: https://www.preplounge.com/en/shop/prep-guide/ace_the_case_interview For the broader thinking on this, search The Consulting Offer Blueprint on Spotify or Apple Podcasts. Feel free to shoot me a message.
View Q&A
BCG SEA (Associate) - I had my 1st interview for first round of interviews last Friday, but I haven't heard back for the 2nd interview schedule.
19 hrs
100+
6
Profile picture of Ashwin
Best answer by
Ashwin
Take a breath. A few days of silence after your first interview is completely normal. BCG's scheduling depends on a lot of things. The principal who interviewed you needs to submit feedback, the recruiting team needs to coordinate calendars for the next interviewer, and all of this takes time. Especially in SEA where the team is spread across multiple offices and time zones. Friday to now is not long at all. "Interviews In Progress" is actually a fine status. If they had decided to reject you, the portal would usually update to reflect that fairly quickly. The fact that it still says in progress just means you are still in the process, which is exactly what you would expect. Here is what I would do. Give it until the end of this week. If you still have not heard anything by Friday, send a short, polite follow up to your recruiting contact. Something like, "Hi [Name], just checking in on the next steps for my first round interviews. Happy to work around any schedule that works on your end." Keep it simple. Don't sound anxious or pushy. One thing to keep in mind. Sometimes there is a delay because they are still deciding whether to proceed or because they are batching candidates together for the next round of interviews. That is normal and not something you can control. The best thing you can do right now is stay calm, prepare as if the second interview is happening, and wait a little longer before reading too much into the silence.
View Q&A
Career coach request
1 day
< 100
4
Profile picture of Franco
Best answer by
Franco
Hi, If you can share a bit more detail about your situation, I’d be happy to offer my perspective free of charge. I may not be able to provide full coaching support, but I can certainly give you some useful guidance to help you get started. I have extensive experience with consulting recruiting and also went through the MBA path, so I’m familiar with both options. Feel free to reach out to me privately if you’d like to discuss it further. Best, Franco
View Q&A
What do you think constitutes successful teamwork?
1 day
5.5k
56
Profile picture of Antonello
Best answer by
Antonello
Empathy; trust; open and honest feedback; clear team norms. Best, Antonello
View Q&A
Did you have to make any sacrifices along the way? What lessons have you learned? Knowing what you do now, would you do it again?
1 day
5.1k
19
Profile picture of Daniel
Best answer by
Daniel
This question tests your ability to do things 80/20. What is 80/20? It’s a rule which basically states that 80% of the results come just from 20% of your efforts. So, in practice it means that you need to be able to prioritise and make trade-offs to complete more work in a given time vs striving for perfection in one specific task. The 80/20 principle is very important in consulting industry, because in most cases you don’t have time to do things perfectly (there are literally not enough hours in a day). So, when preparing for your personal fit interviews make sure you think about situations where you had to make sacrifices along the way (meaning applying 80/20) and make sure to bring those situations up during the interview. A few generic examples of 80/20: you wanted to do your internship but at the same time you were completing two degrees, so you persuaded the company to take you in for less hours than what they usually offer their interns; you were working on the project with your team and wanted to complete everything on time but then encountered a major problem – instead of killing the team and making them work night shifts, you pivoted the project and achieved some results (maybe not the results you wanted, but some results); you were training for a marathon, which was very important to you, but then your team member got sick and you needed to take over his workload – instead of killing yourself by overtraining and overworking, you chose to do a marathon in another city 3 months later, which was a mentally difficult decision but in the end the right one, because you managed to succeed in both; So, once during your interview you get a question about challenges on the way, unexpected problems and issues, think about 80/20 :)
View Q&A

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