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Bain Pymetrics test

pymetrics test
New answer on Jun 13, 2022
4 Answers
1.2 k Views
Anonymous A asked on Jun 11, 2022

Hi, 

Did anyone complete the Bain Pymetrics test with 16 games? 

I know, strictly speaking, one should not prepare for this test as one should accept if one is not suited to be a successful consultant. 

However, I would like to prepare as I believe everyone does (ironic isn't it). Now I cannot find anywhere on the internet what the whole 16 questions are as only 12 are presented and explained. 

Thank you, 

Maria

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Clara
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Content Creator
replied on Jun 13, 2022
McKinsey | Awarded professor at Master in Management @ IE | MBA at MIT |+180 students coached | Integrated FIT Guide aut

Hello!

Most of the online tests are very similar, and test the same skillset. It´s a good thing, since you can prep for them with a very unified approach. Although this may not seem so at first sight since the formats may differ, what is important here -as well as when solving cases- is the core skillset they are trying to test. This is common, and the most important skills are:

80-20 analysis: capacity to analyze, interpret and extract conclusions quickly and in a agile way from a ton of data -of which not all is useful-

Analytic and critical thinking: many ways tested with graphs, charts and tables, that you need to understand and derive decisions or insights from

Mathematical skills: are always somehow present, for which you need to be fast int he basics

The way to get better is practicing as much as possible with similar exercises -those targeted at the same skillset-. Hence, I would strongly recommend you practice it with the Integrated Reasoning part of the GMAT exam.

There are free exams in the internet that you can use for practice (the one of LBS MBA page, VERITAS prep, as well as some free trials for courses such as the one of The Economist (gmat.economist)

Furthermore, you can leverage the MBB tests (in myconsultingoffer, psychometricinstitute, and many others)

Hope it helps!

Best,

Clara

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Cristian
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replied on Jun 12, 2022
#1 rated MBB & McKinsey Coach

Hi Maria, 

I think you're right. It's always better to actually train to improve the skills, rather than practice on the actual problem you're expected to solve. If it feels a bit like cheating, then it probably is :)

Unfortunately, I don't have those specific 16 questions, but I would recommend you practice the sorts of tests you receive for other consulting firms as well. This way at least you get to increase your chances of passing the screening with other firms too. 

Best,

Cristian

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Anonymous replied on Jun 13, 2022

Hey there - 

Send me a DM. I can send you a link that some friends used for the prep.

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Anonymous A on Jun 13, 2022

No need, thank you. I have completed it yesterday. Incidentally, I think I will be rejected as my results will not fit for consulting. I got outcomes like "likes routine, risk taker, approximates results AND takes time to think --> id est, thinks but is too dumb to get the correct answer" ^^ The thing is I got interviews at every single Tier 2 consultancy I applied to and now I am really questioning whether I would fit into consulting

Anonymous B on Oct 14, 2023

Hi There, Can you please provide some details about the additional 4 sets of games? How did you go with that?

Ian
Expert
Content Creator
replied on Jun 12, 2022
#1 BCG coach | MBB | Tier 2 | Digital, Tech, Platinion | 100% personal success rate (8/8) | 95% candidate success rate

Hi Maria,

It's a fair question!

Honestly, even if you “shouldn't” it doesn't hurt to prepare. The main thing here (and, in all of your prep) is you want to avoid boiling the ocean.

Candidates who try to learn every single possible question for the online tests, the cases, market sizing, and behavioral, generally fail. Rather, learn the approach to thinking across all of these so that no matter what comes your way you're ready!

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Clara gave the best answer

Clara

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McKinsey | Awarded professor at Master in Management @ IE | MBA at MIT |+180 students coached | Integrated FIT Guide aut
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