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PhD and Consulting Job

humanities job search recent graduate university
New answer on Oct 04, 2022
6 Answers
1.2 k Views
Anonymous A asked on Oct 01, 2022

Hi,

I am a current PhD student who soon will be graduating. My research area is humanities (literature), but I am looking into consulting jobs. 

Could you advise whether it is worth trying to apply for graduate scheme/entry-level jobs with my qualification, as it is not within business studies? 

Thanks! 

 

 

 

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Francesco
Expert
Content Creator
replied on Oct 02, 2022
#1 Coach for Sessions (4.500+) | 1.500+ 5-Star Reviews | Proven Success (➡ interviewoffers.com) | Ex BCG | 10Y+ Coaching

Hi there,

Q: Could you advise whether it is worth trying to apply for graduate scheme/entry-level jobs with my qualification, as it is not within business studies? 

Yes, you can apply for consulting jobs. I saw cases of candidates with PhD in humanities hired by consulting firms (MBB included). However you will have to prepare well on cases as they won’t lower the bar on the business acumen needed and you may be unfamiliar with some business topics.

To optimize that process, you will need to work on 3 things: a great CV, a great Cover and a referral.

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1) CV

The key elements they will look for and that you can optimize are:

  • University brand
  • Major
  • GPA
  • Work experience
  • Experience abroad
  • Extracurriculars and volunteer experience

The fact you don't have consulting experience is not a problem if you structure your CV correctly.

Red flags include:

  • Low GPA
  • Lack of any kind of work experience
  • Bad formatting / typos
  • 3-4 pages length
  • Lack of clear action --> results structure for the bullets of the experiences
  • Long paragraphs (3-4 lines) for the bullets of the experiences with irrelevant details
  • Long time gaps without any explanation

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2) COVER LETTER

You can structure a cover in 4 parts:

  1. Introduction, mentioning the position you are interested in and a specific element you find attractive for that company
  2. Why you are qualified for the job, where you can report 3 skills/stories from your CV, ideally related to leadership, impact, drive and teamwork
  3. Why you are interested in that particular firm, with additional 1-2 specific reasons
  4. Final remarks, mentioning again your interest and contacts

In part 2 you can write about experiences that show skills useful in consulting such as drive, problem-solving, leadership, teamwork and convincing others.

It is important that in part 3 you make your cover specific to a particular firm – the rule of thumb is, can you send the exact same cover to another consulting company if you change the name? If that’s the case, your cover is too generic.

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3) REFERRALS

This is probably the most important point, in particular if your CV is already good (it seems it is from what you shared).

To find a referral, you should follow three main steps:

  1. Identify the people that can help you
  2. Write them a customized email
  3. Have a call and indirectly ask for a referral

As general tips:

  • Don’t use LinkedIn for your communication – emails work better. You should target 30% conversion for your messages; if you are not achieving that, there is space for improvement
  • When sending emails, your goal should be to organize a call, not to ask questions – you can then use the call for the questions
  • You need to close the call with an indirect request for a referral – don’t leave that to chance. There are specific ways to phrase it

You should prepare three main things before the call:

  • Your own pitch. 3-4 lines should be enough
  • 3-4 questions on the personal experiences of the person. Avoid to ask questions about the company
  • A closing question for the referral. It should be an indirect request to avoid being too pushy

You can find more information on networking and referrals here:

▶ How to Get an MBB Invitation 

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If you need more help please feel free to PM me.

Best,

Francesco

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Dennis
Expert
Content Creator
replied on Oct 02, 2022
Ex-Roland Berger|Project Manager and Recruiter|7+ years of consulting experience in USA and Europe

Hi,

I personally know people who entered consulting with a “non-conventional” background (e.g. history, sociology) and even made it to management level. So it’s not unheard of albeit also not the norm.

I think it will depend on your narrative as to  why you want to enter consulting and what kinds of skills and qualities you think you could bring to the table. Try to network with consultants before applying so you could get a referral which usually makes getting an interview easier.

In the interviews you can then show them that you still have sufficient business knowledge and acumen despite not having a business degree. I definitely recommend studying for this process as I would assume that interviewers would want to tease out if a literature major can “really handle business topics”.

In summary, don’t shy away from applying but be willing to put a lot of effort in the interview preparation.

Feel free to reach out if you have further questions.

Best wishes

 

 

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Ian
Expert
Content Creator
replied on Oct 02, 2022
#1 BCG coach | MBB | Tier 2 | Digital, Tech, Platinion | 100% personal success rate (8/8) | 95% candidate success rate

Hi there,

There are a lot of PhD-based consulting programs (for example, Bridge to BCG). I would highly recommend you take a look at these. Additionally, make sure you network extensively in order to figure out exactly which role makes the most sense for each company!

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Lucie
Expert
Content Creator
replied on Oct 02, 2022
10+yrs recruiting & BCG Project leader

Absolutely yes, PhDs of all different specialties are common MBBers, hence you can pursue such career too, as long as you think you would enjoy such career. I have a lot of experience with PhDs MBB prep, hence feel free to reach out.

Good luck

Lucie

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Emily
Expert
Content Creator
replied on Oct 02, 2022
Ex McKinsey EM & interviewer (5 yrs) USA & UK| Coached / interviewed 300 +|Free 15 min intro| Stanford MBA|Non-trad

You would count as an experienced hire for most firms - it's worth speaking with HR to determine exactly what level you should apply to but it won't be quite at the entry level.

Good luck!

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Sofia
Expert
replied on Oct 04, 2022
Top-Ranked Coach on PrepLounge for 3 years| McKinsey San Francisco | Harvard graduate | 6+ years of coaching

Hello,

Lots of PhDs from all sorts of different fields work in consulting! You should network and talk to recruiters at the specific firms you want to apply to about your situation - my guess is that you would come in somewhere at the Junior Associate / Senior Analyst level (i.e., as an experienced hire, higher than entry-level).

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