Hi as in the title I'm wondering what are the differences in work at McKinsey?
1) Pay
2) travel
3) Progression
4) work (internal and external)
And any other differences anyone might think of?
Thanks!
Hi as in the title I'm wondering what are the differences in work at McKinsey?
1) Pay
2) travel
3) Progression
4) work (internal and external)
And any other differences anyone might think of?
Thanks!
Hi there,
This is indeed an interesting question which is probably relevant for a lot of users, thus I am happy to provide my perspective on it:
In case you want a more detailed discussion on what to do in your specific situation, please feel free to contact me directly.
Best,
Hagen
Hey,
CFS and Generalists are different incomparable buckets in the structure.
Generalism vs Sustainability Practice
1 G > S very insignificantly, a bit larger dif at EM/AP level, crucially depends at P/SP
2 G ≈ S
3 G ≈ S, depends very much on you
4 G ≈ S structurally but may have dif subject. Still all current projects have sustainability reflection.
CFS vs non-CSF
1,2,3 CFS >> non
4 Completely, though have tiny overlap
Hi there,
I worked with McKinsey's sustainability practice quite a bit as a generalist alongside a number of specialists - here's an interesting McKinsey article I co-authored during this time, which shows you what projects can be like.
Here's my take on your points:
All in all, both paths can give you a high end career at McKinsey and the driving force behind your decision making should be your degree of specialization.
The sustainability specialists I know in McKinsey are typically generalists within sustainability and then very focused in certain areas e.g., CO2 markets and trading certificates (more commercially oriented), building large hydrogen plants (more engineering and capital projects oriented), etc.
The spectrum is huge and I'd be happy to elaborate more - feel free to get in touch.
Best,
Moritz
From my understanding, pay and progression may be a bit lower (albeit this really depends on your experience, how quickly you progress). Travel will also depend on your specific sector, but generally expect quite a bit of it.
Work will be specialised and will support a wider study on sustainability questions, either with expert knowledge or with more bespoke work on specific areas of the study (e.g. responsible for modelling climate impacts on x).
Internally, not much changes although your BD will be much more focussed on sustainability issues.
Just to say, this will also depend on whether you are operating in a company which was acquired by McKinsey (Material Economics, Planetrics).
Hi there,
The short answer is that if you love sustainability you should go sustainability. The differences are not so vast as to prevent you doing what you enjoy. The main difference is in the work.
1) Pay - mostly the same
2) travel - likely less as specialist
3) Progression - mostly the same
4) work (internal and external) - different (quite logically)
Hello!
It can depend a lot case by case! Pay is very similar, and travel is totally engagement dependent. Same with internal/external: as a specialist it may seem that you do mostly internal development work, but I have worked with plenty of specialist when I was a generalist in client-facing engagements.
Hope it helps!
Cheers,
Clara
Hi there,
There's another question that tackles precisely this topic. You might found the answers useful:
https://www.preplounge.com/en/consulting-forum/junior-specialist-vs-junior-associate-15117
Best,
Cristian
Hello,
Fully agree with Moritz here, he has a great answer.
All the best!
Rushabh