2014 Ivey MBA Consulting Club: On-Campus Recruiting Report
2014 Ivey MBA Consulting Club: On-Campus Recruiting Report
2014 Ivey MBA Consulting Club: On-Campus Recruiting Report
Consulting Club
On-Campus Recruiting Report
Table of Contents
Context.1
Key Insights..3-8
Survey Results...9-12
Context
Key Insights
1
(1 of 6)
Key Insights
3
(2 of 6)
Networking is critical
The easiest way to get an interview is to know someone at the firm, make
a good impression on them, and have them recommend you to HR. Dont
worry if you dont already know someone there; there are lots of
opportunities in the program (e.g., Get Connected, Ivey Partner program)
to meet them as long as you make it happen.
Networking is a great way to learn more about the firm, and to
demonstrate your skills and desire to work there. This is especially
important in second round interviews when firms weight fit heavily.
Remember to be yourself. People know you are playing the game, so
dont be too pushy. Make sure to network early, because by the time
September rolls around, people wont have time for you (and some firms
have policies prohibiting their people from talking to you).
Make sure not to burn any bridges when networking. If you approach
every interaction as a transaction, you wont get very far.
A typical criticism of Ivey students is that we are very well prepared for
cases, but need work on the behavioural / fit component. Keep this in
mind and work to address it.
Key Insights
5
(3 of 6)
Key Insights
7
(4 of 6)
Work hard
Landing a Consulting job is a big accomplishment that will provide great
future career opportunities and financial rewards. If you want to be
successful, recognize that this is going to take a lot of hard work.
Remember that you are competing against a broad pool of very skilled
candidates that include MBAs from Canada, MBAs from big-name U.S.
schools, and other qualified folks with PhDs, etc.
Expect that you will need to practice at least 50+ cases and devote
100-200 hours (or more) to your preparation. The only way to truly do
well in your interviews is to put this much work in, and to start as soon as
possible. We mean it.
At the end of the fall recruiting season, the last thing you want is to regret
that you should have done more. You have a potentially life-changing
opportunity available to you. Work for it.
Key Insights
9
(5 of 6)
10
Key Insights
11
(6 of 6)
12
13
Survey results
(1 of 3)
Useless
Indifferent
Valuable
Super Saturday in Toronto was critical for cases practice and networking
School case packs were essential as starting material for interview practice
Mock Super Saturdays were helpful for meeting new people
Caseinterview.com articles provided information on hundreds of topics
Looking Over My Shoulder helped students hear good and bad examples
Survey results
(2 of 3)
In-person conversations
with firm consultants
Get Connected
Phone conversations
with firm consultants
On-campus infosession
1
Useless
Indifferent
Valuable
10
Survey results
Degree
What is your
educational
background?
(3 of 3)
Students
Offers
Engineering
16
Business
13
Social Science
Science
Technology
What is your
previous work
experience?
Students
Offers
Consulting
Financial Services
Engineering
IT
Industrial Goods
Consumer Products
Entrepreneur
Pharma / Healthcare
Public Sector
Sales
Legal
11
Recruiting statistics
Applicants
Round 1
Interview
Round 2
Interview
Offer
Accenture
14
AT Kearney
26
Bain
29
10
BCG
27
Booz
Capco
Capgemini
Deloitte
13
E&Y
McKinsey
28
Monitor-Deloitte
18
PWC
RBC
Rogers
Roland-Berger
10
SECOR-KPMG
19
ZS Associates
Firm
12
Toronto
(1 of 5)
Applicants
R1
R2
Offers
14
Interview
Thoughts
Alums
Rishi Chawla (13), Chris Casey (11), Daniel Moro (11), Derek Fournier (10)
Offices
Toronto
Interview
Applicants
R1
R2
Offers
26
Thoughts
Cases were focused primarily on supply chain management and tested your
ability to dive deeper into a seemingly normal issue.
Approach the ATK interview process as if you are working on a fun project
with your colleagues as the firm really wants to see if you enjoy the cases
rather than just cracking them.
Alums
Note:
Gad Elharar (14), Natalie Shield (14), Brent Duffin (12), Mike Forcht (11)
Thoughts were collected from 2014 MBA class survey and represent individual respondents opinions.
List of Alums may not be exhaustive
13
Toronto
(2 of 5)
Applicants
R1
R2
Offers
29
10
Thoughts
Alums
Offices
Toronto, Montreal
Applicants
R1
R2
Offers
27
Interview
Thoughts
BCG is really looking to gear-up with staff. They have a VERY high bar, but
were much friendlier and inclusive in their recruiting efforts than McKinsey
was. The opportunity at BCG seems very promising from a development
perspective.
Alums
Note:
Thoughts were collected from 2014 MBA class survey and represent individual respondents opinions.
List of Alums may not be exhaustive
14
Toronto
(3 of 5)
Applicants
R1
R2
Offers
Thoughts
Alums
Offices
Toronto, Various
Applicants
R1
R2
Offers
13
Interview
Thoughts
Alums
Offices
Toronto
Applicants
R1
R2
Offers
Interview
Standard interview process in the first round. The second round included a
written and presentation based case.
Thoughts
Alums
Note:
Thoughts were collected from 2014 MBA class survey and represent individual respondents opinions.
List of Alums may not be exhaustive
15
(4 of 5)
Applicants
R1
R2
Offers
28
Thoughts
McKinsey likes to be 'different'. They will emphasize how they do not like to
interview with someone who is too prepared, but that's not an invitation to
be lazy. In particular, prepare your behavioural stories and learn about how
specific they want you to be.
McKinsey seemed to not be really interested in hiring Canadian MBAs. It
will take a very, very special person to get a job in Toronto.
Alums
Leslie Shaw Calgary (14), Wei Lin (12), Alex McMurray Calgary (12)
Offices
Toronto
Interview
Applicants
R1
R2
Offers
18
First round interviews will include one written case. You will be given a
package of 3-4 slides and asked to review it on your own for ~20 minutes,
then the interviewer will come back to the room to discuss what you found
Second round interviews are conducted in a group format. You will be sitting
in a room with a group of 5-6 other candidates and must present your
answer in front of the group plus observers.
Thoughts
Alums
Note:
Tom Pickles (14), Lucy Li (13), Eric Cheung (11). Vipul Lalka (08)
Thoughts were collected from 2014 MBA class survey and represent individual respondents opinions.
List of Alums may not be exhaustive
16
(5 of 5)
Business Architecture
Offices
Toronto
Applicants
R1
R2
Offers
Interview
The 1st round case was a conceptual case. A single table was provided and
the interviewee was asked to talk though the main question / approach.
Thoughts
Alums
Drew Rankin (14), Smurti Patel (13), Vivek Kalwani (12), Razy Farook (11)
Offices
Applicants
R1
R2
Offers
19
Interview
Thoughts
The firm itself is more quirky than your average firm - personality is allowed
to shine through and friendliness and camaraderie are important. A more
casual firm, but still professional.
In the written case, leverage your DMA. I installed data analysis tool kit on
their computer. Determine what you would like to explore further, what
additional data you would have liked, how you would test conclusions etc.
Still going through KPMG merger so some details are still being ironed out.
Alums
Note:
Thoughts were collected from 2014 MBA class survey and represent individual respondents opinions.
List of Alums may not be exhaustive
17