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McKinsey - Generalist v. Practice Consultant

Hello,

I am currently interviewing for McKinsey, and my final round is scheduled to be next week.  For background, I have a prior Big 4 consulting experience prior to law school and am currently a finance lawyer.  

I applied as a generalist, but have been told that I am now being considered as a Strategy/Corporate Finance practice consultant role.  In contrast, I am being considered for generalist roles at other MBB firms.

My question is: what difference does being considered as Strategy/Corporate Finance practice consultant mean in terms of (1) the recruiting process and (2) the actual job at McK?  If I get this offer as well as another offer from Bain/BCG as a generalist, should a practice consultant role be a pro or a con to my decisionmaking process?

Thank you.

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Top answer
Deleted user
on Mar 10, 2022

Hi there, full disclosure: I have little knowledge of McK or Bain operations and I am biased, as I was never a generalist, but only affiliated to a specific practice. But here are my two cents:

1. My personal case and a frequent case of other BCG colleagues is that I signed the contract as a generalist, but I was exclusively doing projects for a specific practice (healthcare) - this is because one can be officially affiliated only starting from a project manager, but Staffing and partners keep your background in consideration while placing you on projects anyway. That's why I wouldn't use affiliation as a differentiating factor b/w  McK, BCG & Bain.

2. I truly think it's wonderful to be affiliated for several reasons:

- that practice's partners can become your mentors

- you are a member of a group, with which you go on trips and dinners, that helps you out and supports you - you feel connected to your colleagues and your place of work, something that I think is not easy to achieve in consulting, especially in bigger offices and especially in the working-from-home era 

- you have certain predictability in your assignments: often you continue working with the same client or the same manager, thus adding some tranquility into your work. For these reasons, I recommend everyone to get affiliated, unless you want to keep your exit options open.

Hope this helps! Best,

15
Florian
Coach
on Mar 10, 2022
1400 5-star reviews across platforms | 600+ offers | Highest-rated case book on Amazon | Uni lecturer in US, Asia, EU

Hey there,

1. The recruiting process is exactly the same

  • Interview rounds
  • Interview format (case and PEI)
  • You have a higher chance to receive strategy or CF cases but this is not a certainty and in general, McKinsey cases are all about the approach and not domain knowledge

To prep, have a look at the 2 articles I wrote:

  1. Case interview: https://www.preplounge.com/en/mckinsey-interview
  2. PEI: https://www.preplounge.com/en/mckinsey-pei

 

2. The job is also the same but you will spend 80% of your work on strategy or CF engagements. The way the work is conducted, team setting, salary, everything really is the same regardless of the industry or practice function. Two differences: 1. On top of office events, you are also invited for practice events (more fun than a generalist), and 2. work-life balance tends to be a bit more stressful for strategy work (on average).

Cheers,

Florian

Allen
Coach
edited on Mar 10, 2022
Ex-McK Experienced Hire and EM - I show you how to perform at your best

Hi there,

It would be most appropriate to ask this question of the recruiter, as they should be very comfortable explaining the “official” answer.

Unofficially, I think that, contrary to the impression you get from the websites explaining the different practices, there is much more overlap between the roles than what differentiates.

While McKinsey will give the impression that it has expertise and highly-dedicated staff in each of its practices, the truth is that lower-tenure consultants can typically work on any project.  I was practice-dedicated and I part of teams where the generalists were playing highly specialized roles, even more than I was.  I was also on generalist teams.  

That being said, at McKinsey, it generally helps to be practice dedicated if you want to find it easier to work in that practice.  Also, following your time at McK, generally it's an advantage to be able to tell people outside McK, that you were an “expert” in the practice.

Because of the above, your interviews will generally look the same, but you are a more likely to be interviewed by people in the practice, and therefore, more likely to receive practice-related cases.

The implication of all this is that it doesn't really matter what you choose.  But if you wish to be focus on that practice, go for it!

Hope this helps,

Allen

Moritz
Coach
on Mar 10, 2022
ex-McKinsey EM & Interviewer | 7/8 offer rate for 4+ sessions | High impact sessions + FREE materials & exercises

Hi there,

Here's from my own experience at McKinsey:

Interview process: Exactly the same for generalists and those joining a practice. Don't expert any corporate finance cases or anything along those lines.

Actual job: Your staffers will be part of the same practice and will make sure you'll be working on dedicated projects. However, you can also do projects outside of your practice if that's what you want. I was part of McKinsey OPS and worked on all kinds of projects (make you own McKinsey!). Also, some practices don't have such a strict up or out culture but rather grow or go, which is ultimately the same, just a bit less strict.

Hope this helps a bit! Best of luck!

on Mar 10, 2022
Empathic coach, former McKinsey Engagement Manager |Secure offers from top consulting firms

Dear candidate, 

a) the main difference is you will likely work on projects in your practise, a lot of the evaluations you will receive will be from people in your practise and you will be asked to also contribute to practise knowledge development.

b) my personal preference has always been to join as generalist when given the chance to, so that I could try out different industries, work on what is available and get to know colleagues. however this does not mean that this is the same for your situation. Meaning, McK is such a great firm, it might still make sense for you to join even if you get a generalist offer elsewhere.

Ian
Coach
on Mar 11, 2022
Top US BCG / MBB Coach - 5,000 sessions |Tech, Platinion, Big 4 | 9/9 personal interviews passed | 95% candidate success

Hi there,

It's really quite simple/straightforward: You are going to work more in Strategy/Corporate Finance projects.

In terms of the interview please don't trick yourself into thinking you will only get Strategy/Corp Finance cases! You need to be prepared for all case types, BUT you should additionally be particularly knowledgeable and ready for Strat/Corp Finance based cases.

Additional info on Fit: https://www.preplounge.com/en/articles/tell-me-about-yourself-interview-question

Additional info on Casing: https://www.preplounge.com/en/articles/how-to-shift-your-mindset-to-ace-the-case

Udayan
Coach
on Mar 14, 2022
Top rated Case & PEI coach/Multiple real offers/McKinsey EM in New York /12 years recruiting experience

Hi,

 

Quick answers to your questions

 

  • Recruiting process is the same with some minor changes - for example, they will ask more case questions that focus on corporate finance. And they will drill deeper into any experience you have had previously with this type of work
  • Actual job - you will have to spend at least 60% of your time working for projects in the Corp Fin practice. Theoretically you can spend the remaining 40% on other projects but that is not very easy to do so in some ways you are committing to a practice before joining the firm.
  • Whether it is a pro or a con depends on how much you like or dislike the kind of work this practice does - make sure you ask all relevant questions to get a good sense of this.

Best,

Udayan

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