Get Active in Our Amazing Community of Over 451,000 Peers!

Schedule mock interviews on the Meeting Board, join the latest community discussions in our Consulting Q&A and find like-minded Case Partners to connect and practice with!

LEK zoom test

LEK
New answer on Dec 14, 2020
5 Answers
1.4 k Views
Anonymous A asked on Dec 11, 2020

Hello preplounge community,

Please can anyone who has done the LEK zoom test tell me what it was like and how to prepare for it? Was it easier or more challenging than the online applied test? How many questions in total etc..

Thank you

Overview of answers

Upvotes
  • Upvotes
  • Date ascending
  • Date descending
Best answer
Ian
Expert
Content Creator
replied on Dec 11, 2020
#1 BCG coach | MBB | Tier 2 | Digital, Tech, Platinion | 100% personal success rate (8/8) | 95% candidate success rate

First, good luck!

Now, there are two parts to this...Virtual Testing and the Numerical Test

Virtual

As a general guide, pretty much all of the rules you can think of that apply to in-person interviews are the same for virtual interviews!

Some key things to remember for video interviews:

  • Make sure you have a strong internet connection
  • Make sure your sound+video work
  • Have a good desk space and keep using paper for solving the case,
  • Make sure you'll be in a quiet space with no distractions
  • Still dress for the occasion

Numerical Test

The online tests across companies and across time are very similar

Format? Somewhat. Content and what's required from you ability-wise? Not at all.

The best way is to really find online tests / questions and practice. Regardless as to whether is a new or old test, the principles are mostly the same:

  • Time management (need to think quick)
  • Business knowledge/context (incl key formulas)
  • Critical thinking (answers that are very similar to each other...clues "hidden" in the text)
  • Ability to interpret data/charts

Think of it as a merge of a case and the GMAT/GRE.

You need to be clear on some key case-related and account formulas (margin, growth, breakeven, etc) as well as be good at critically understanding the question (including nuance to questions) and parsing through complicated text with a fair amount of distraction.

You'll also need to be good at chart/graph reading.

The (old) McKinsey PST, BCG Online Test, Bain SOVA test, etc. are all quite similar so leverage resources across all of them.

https://www.myconsultingoffer.org/case-study-interview-prep/bcg-online/

https://www.shl.com/shldirect/en/practice-tests

https://www.psychometricinstitute.co.uk/Free-Aptitude-Tests.asp

Was this answer helpful?
Gaurav
Expert
Content Creator
replied on Dec 11, 2020
#1 Career Coach for Aspiring, Practicing & Ex-Consultants|The Only 360° Coach - Ex-Mckinsey, Certified Coach & Recruiter

Hi there! My advice to you is to practice, mostly your preparation should be based on previous online tests. You should develop your critical thinking, ability to work with information, and make quick decisions, find a way out of situations and deepen your knowledge in business.

Basically, to prepare you can use some mock potential test for Bain, BCG, PST (McKinsey), or GMAT and I would recommend you after every test check the solution to see where you have gone wrong, so you will improve your results very quickly.

Do you need any further help?

GB

Was this answer helpful?
Adi
Expert
Content Creator
replied on Dec 11, 2020
Accenture, Deloitte | Precision Case Prep | Experienced Interviewer & Career Coach | 15 years professional experience

Hey there,

I believe this has been answered in the forum before. Have a look at this thread please:https://www.preplounge.com/en/consulting-forum/got-an-invite-for-in-person-now-zoom-only-lek-numerical-reasoning-test-already-passed-the-applied-8478

Was this answer helpful?
Antonello
Expert
Content Creator
replied on Dec 14, 2020
McKinsey | NASA | top 10 FT MBA professor for consulting interviews | 6+ years of coaching

Hi,

The LEK test contains a mixture of:

- Basic algebra (SHL-style, i.e. questions with graphs and lots of basic computations).

- Data sufficiency maths (GMAT-style, i.e. inferring results with key pieces of information).

- Error spotting (literally spotting a missing letter or digit in lines of code).

There is a practice test on the testing platform with pretty similar questions which you can
take as many times until you get it all right, so I'd just advise using this as the source of
practice, as the test contains elements of all the different types of common maths tests.

In terms of difficulty - time was relatively pressured; questions start easier and get fairly
tricky at the end - I found it harder than BCG and Bain maths tests but by no means
impossible.

Let me know if you need more information.

Best,

Anto

Was this answer helpful?
Clara
Expert
Content Creator
replied on Dec 14, 2020
McKinsey | Awarded professor at Master in Management @ IE | MBA at MIT |+180 students coached | Integrated FIT Guide aut

Hello!

unfortunately, I don´t have experience with this test in particular.

However, good news is that 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.

I would strongly recomment 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, Verits prep, as well as some free trials for courses such as the one of The Economist (https://gmat.economist.com/)

Furthermore, you can leverage the MBB tests (https://www.myconsultingoffer.org/case-study-interview-prep/bcg-online/, https://www.psychometricinstitute.co.uk/Free-Aptitude-Tests.asp, and many others)

Hope it helps!

Was this answer helpful?
How likely are you to recommend us to a friend or fellow student?
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
0 = Not likely
10 = Very likely