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McKinsey - what if I don't have a leadership story?

Hello together, 

I got interviews coming up for all M/B/B. I would describe myself more as an introvert. My resume is stellar through won prizes, sholarships and great Universities. 

With Bain and BCG I already passed the first rounds and did not find the personal fit questions too hard. 

With McK, I have to prepare different stories. One of those is regarding inclusive leadership. 

Quite frankly, I've never ever lead a team in my life. 

My study background is very theoretical STEM and I rarely had to work on group work so frequent as business people. And if I had, my group was working quite efficient by itself and there was no challenge or difficulty. 

How should I tackle this now? Am I excluded from the interview process already?

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Top answer
Florian
Coach
on Oct 20, 2022
1400 5-star reviews across platforms | 600+ offers | Highest-rated case book on Amazon | Uni lecturer in US, Asia, EU

Hey there,

In short, you cannot no have an inclusive leadership story.

Declining to discuss a PEI question or telling a story that does not fit would lead to rejection.

However, I encounter this belief often, and as it turns out it is always unfounded and rather comes from everyone's individual interpretation of what leadership means.

For a McKinsey Inclusive Leadership story, the interviewer will ask you about a situation where you led a team through a challenging time to achieve a certain goal. For this dimension, you need to show that you ...

  • ... can handle a diverse group that accepts you as their leader, with diversity being the result of different backgrounds, cultures, hierarchy levels, etc.
  • ... tailor your leadership style to different groups and group members
  • ... demonstrate your ability to make the team succeed by helping to structure, divide, and delegate tasks and providing them with work plans, deadlines, and effective communication
  • ... motivate your team, improve the team spirit and the working environment for all involved
  • ... are interested in the well-being of the team and their own individual development along the way
  • ... deal with conflicts between teammates and goals effectively

Overall, showcase that your presence as a team leader had a positive impact on the team and lead to a strong outcome of a particular project or task.

You do not need to be an official leader. What is important is that you create an environment that allows for strong collaboration and problem-solving among the team members, bringing out each individual's strengths.

I have written an article on the topic that goes into a bit more detail here: https://www.preplounge.com/mckinsey-pei

Cheers,

Florian

Sidi
Coach
edited on Oct 20, 2022
McKinsey Senior EM & BCG Consultant | Interviewer at McK & BCG for 7 years | Coached 400+ candidates secure MBB offers

Hi! Please push yourself harder!

“I have never lead a team” is the wrong thinking! You don't need to be a formal leader! Leadership for McKinsey does NOT mean to have formal authority over others. Quite the contrary! Oftentimes Leadership stories are stronger when you didn't have formal authority. 

Leadership means for McKinsey to enable others around you to reach a common goal. So think about when you were part of a team, the team struggled, and what did you do to first understand the root cause for the struggle, and then help the other team members to overcome this root cause?

This is what it is about! Ideally, you select an example where team members were diverse in terms of backgrounds or profiles and where you contributed in fostering inclusiveness, so that everyone could bring their best to the task.

That's just an impulse, but it should largely help you to overcome the narrow “I never led a team” mindset. :) 

Cheers, Sidi

Alberto
Coach
on Dec 30, 2023
Ex-McKinsey AP | +13 yrs hiring top talent | I help you think, speak & perform like a real consultant (95% success)

Hi there,

Being asked for a leadership story you should focus on your best experience leading a team (of any size), either on a personal or professional situation. Keys here:

  • You leading style is and how you inspire the team to reach a challenging goal
  • Your teamwork skills to coordinate work and make everyone shine
  • Your ability to understand and act on team dynamics, even the personal ones (motivations, frustrations)

I am sure you will be able to find something, even from your academic or personal life.

Alberto

Check out my latest case based on a real MBB interview: Sierra Springs

Udayan
Coach
on Oct 24, 2022
Top rated Case & PEI coach/Multiple real offers/McKinsey EM in New York /12 years recruiting experience

An inclusive leadership story has three elements at its core

  1. A scenario where there is a group of people that are different to others (it can be anything that is easy to see for example introverts vs extroverts or Engineers vs Non engineers)
  2. One group facing an issue because they are divers - e.g., non engineers not being able to contribute to product discussions because engineering team does not believe they need external help
  3. You seeing that this is an issue taking all the steps needed to make the team an inclusive and open working environment

Think of scenarios that fit the above story types (there are many many examples of how certain people are different to others) and you will be fine. It has nothing to do with STEM or non STEM. You also do not need to LEAD a team. You just need to identify this as an issue and solve it - leadership is not about titles but about being a leader which is independent of your role.

Best,

Udayan

Pedro
Coach
on Oct 20, 2022
Bain | EY-Parthenon | Former Principal | 1.5h session | 30% discount 1st session

The real problem is that you have the wrong definition of leadership in your mind. It is not about being in charge (being “the boss”).

A lot of candidates discuss how they divided tasks and distributed them along team members, avoided micro-managing people and gave “motivational speaches”. That's decent project management (ideally without the speaches), but it is not being a leader. 
Not at all.

Leadership is about owning the problems, ensuring aligment towards a certain goal, and enabling others bring out their best in order to achieve that goal.

That means speaking up when you think the team is going the wrong way. Taking action when you anticipate problems (either “technical” or personal). Making sure that everyone participates in discussions and that you help out people who are in trouble doing their tasks. Just to name a few examples.

With this in mind, I am sure you will be able to find a good example in your past.

on Oct 20, 2022
#1 rated McKinsey Coach

Hi there, 

My suggestion is to think of the term leadership in broader terms, beyond the meaning of you managing a team. 

For instance, you can show leadership skills also when working with only one person, by motivating them to work towards a goal. Alternatively, you can show leadership skills when you liaise with different stakeholders to achieve a common goal without them reporting directly to you (some might be even more senior than you). 

Have a deeper look at your CV and your experience and try to do a brainstorming exercise to come up with some additional ideas. If you struggle, try getting some expert support to help you figure these things out. 
 

Best,

Cristian

Emily
Coach
on Oct 20, 2022
Ex McKinsey EM & interviewer (5 yrs) USA & UK| Coached / interviewed 300 +|Free 15 min intro| Stanford MBA|Non-trad

Great question!

You absolutely have a leadership story - you probably just don't know it yet! Leadership doesn't have to be about a time when you were officially a ‘team leader’. When have you led people even informally? Rallied people around you to solve a particular problem? Solicited people's input on something which you're trying to achieve? These are all forms of informal leadership which are just as valid as formal leadership. 

I'd recommend trying to reframe like that - I'm sure that you'll have some experiences that you can think about. 

Hope that helps! 

Ian
Coach
on Oct 20, 2022
Top US BCG / MBB Coach - 5,000 sessions |Tech, Platinion, Big 4 | 9/9 personal interviews passed | 95% candidate success

Then you don't get an offer…

I'm sorry but you need to push yourself harder here! Figure out a time where you have demonstrated leadership. I promise you it's there.

Think back on your work groups to see if you ever led. Think back to university. Or, broaden your thinking and reflect on other, non-professional experiences.

I'm sorry, but not having a story is not an option. Push! (Or, potentially hire a coach to help you craft a story here)

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