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McKinsey vs BCG offer Europe - travel requirements

Hello everyone,

I recently received offers from McKinsey and BCG as experienced hire (~3y of experience). Both of them are for the same office, in Western Europe. I have been weighing pros and cons, but find it difficult to make a decision. 

As I'm not keen to constantly travel / be away from home, I was wondering how much influence you have at McKinsey on being staffed in the local market versus elsewhere? I know at BCG in Europe it's much more common to be staffed close to your office, but I find less conclusive info on McKinsey. 

Thanks for the help!

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Florian
Coach
on Aug 03, 2022
1400 5-star reviews across platforms | 600+ offers | Highest-rated case book on Amazon | Uni lecturer in US, Asia, EU

Hey there,

That depends:

  1. In general, BCG has a more local staffing model
  2. On the other hand, McKinsey allows you to have much more influence on the projects you are working on (e.g., I never worked on an engagement I did not actively want to work on and rejected many others along the way + was actively looking for the engagements I would enjoy)

I would reach out to HR and current consultants in those offices to discuss their experiences. 

At the end of the day, it also depends on the typical work that is done close to the office. For instance, if you are in London and are looking for local staffing opportunities, chances are that most of your work will be in finance. If you enjoy that type of work, great. If not, it might be more feasible to travel and work on engagements you actually enjoy.

Lastly, the travel for me was a big plus. It separates work and leisure time as well as location. While away, everything is taken care of for you (hotel, food, transportation, etc), while at home you still have to take care of many things at the same time as working 60+ hour weeks. At the same time, during the week, you won't have any time for personal activities anyway, so it does not really matter if you are away.

Cheers,

Florian

Deleted user
on Aug 02, 2022

Hello,

Congratulations on your offers! Stanislav has given you some excellent advice, and my only additional two cents would be that it generally gets easier with seniority/given your network. If my goal was to get staffed locally as much as possible, I would make it a priority to network with people in my local office, find out what the projects/clients in the area are, and try to get staffed on those, both by talking to the consultants involved, and by letting your professional development manager know that you prefer to get staffed locally. The stronger your network and the better people know about you and the work that you do, the more choice you will have in projects. 

It's certainly possible to get staffed locally at McKinsey, though it depends on geography/practice area/office size, as Stanislav described. For instance, when I worked at McKinsey in San Francisco, the vast majority of my cases were local.

9
on Aug 02, 2022
Ex-McKinsey AP | Interviewed 50+ candidates, gave 10+ offers | Own MBB-inspired cases | Oxford and Cambridge graduate

Hi there, congratulations on getting not one but two MBB offers! Awesome stuff, I hope you get to pause and savour this moment :) 

Regarding travel – here is some input from an ex-AP at McKinsey's Paris office. 

1. In general, the bigger your office, the higher the chance that you will be staffed locally since there will be more local projects to choose from

2. The regional grouping of your office matters. For example, the Paris office of McK was part of the standalone France cluster. In contract, UK is part of the UK, Ireland and Israel hub, which could mean a single staffing list for all three locations, and the same consultants being distributed to all three countries! 

3. The country and its degree of centralisation matters. Germany and the US are very decentralised, you have many major clients spread in minor towns across the country. In contrast, the UK is very London-centric, France is very Paris-centric…


4. Your industry of choice matters. If you want to do Oil & Gas or Manufacturing Ops, you should get ready for trips down to oil rigs or factories. If you want to do Banking, the chances are you will stick to large cities and/or you country's major financial center (Paris, London, Frankfurt…) Not a lot of major banking happening in the provines! 

5. It matters if you are a generalist or member of a particular ‘practice’; Operations, Marketing and Sales, Risk... Oftentimes practices are on the regional level: e.g., the European Risk practice. This means that the staffing is centralised on a European level, and you can get staffed to any European country that is in need of a Risk specialist

6. Don't forget that you have a say in this. While not 100% bulletproof, if you communicate your desire to stay close to home and keep reminding about it, the chances are that your staffers will be less likely to post you somewhere. 

7. Final word of caution: not travelling at all will be difficult. Moreover, after a certain point McKinsey requires you to have international exposure and even ‘knowledge radiation' and foreign supporters to get promoted to Partner. So maybe the best course of action is to find a way to do out of town projects painlessly for you – pick projecst in cities with good connections to yours, not too far away… etc.

Hope this can give you some perspective. Good luck in your choice and enjoy consulting! 

Ian
Coach
edited on Aug 02, 2022
Top US BCG / MBB Coach - 5,000 sessions |Tech, Platinion, Big 4 | 9/9 personal interviews passed | 95% candidate success

Hi there,

First of all, don't do pros/cons - that's not the way to solve problems!

As you know, nothing beats frameworking….use your frameworking skills here :)

In general, BCG is more likely to keep you closer to home. However, ultimately, your job is always going to involve a confluence of factors both in and outside your control (when you join and market forces will combine with you networking, persistence, and ability to hold your own).

I actually advise you network a bit and speak with consultants at both these offices to get their honest take!

Udayan
Coach
on Aug 03, 2022
Top rated Case & PEI coach/Multiple real offers/McKinsey EM in New York /12 years recruiting experience

The short answer to your question is - in general McK is not as flexible about staffing you locally. There are exceptions to this - for example parents get priority for local staffing or other caregivers as well but these are exceptions and not the norm.

If being staffed locally is your only criteria then it is safer to go with BCG

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