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How To Ace Your Consulting Case Interview At Bain, McKinsey And BCG—Part 3

Ex-BCG consultant reveals the skills you need to land your dream post-MBA job

By  Kenton Kivestu

Wed Oct 11 2017

BusinessBecause
Read part two here

Kenton Kivestu began his career with stints at BCG and Google. He is currently the CEO of an interactive, skills-based prep platform that prepares students for case interviews. RocketBlocks has helped thousands of students land jobs at McKinsey, BCG & Bain over the last five years.

Communication is, without doubt, the most underrated skill of the consulting interview. Here’s the crazy thing: most candidates don’t even realize they will be explicitly evaluated on it! In Part three of this series, we're going to dig into this foundational soft skill.

Indeed, many soft skills are critical for success in consulting interviews. But communication is the ‘building block’ soft skill because firms, rightly so, see it as an enabler for other skillsets they also care about like leadership and collaboration.

Why do communication skills matter so much?

Elite consulting firms like McKinsey, BCG and Bain are widely known for their analytical chops and quantitative rigor. As a result, many prospective consultants ignore the importance of effective communication. After all, if you arrive at the right answer to a complicated client problem, does it really matter how you communicate it? Many candidates think not. They are wrong.

Why? Getting the right answer is only half the work.

The other half is getting buy in from your own teammates, your managers, your partners, your clients, the client’s exec team and, ultimately, anyone at the client company needed to implement your solution. The lynchpin to wrangling and aligning all that buy-in is effective communication. Thus, effective communication is an incredibly highly prized skill in the consulting world.

Ok, so how do I communicate effectively?

Great question. The simple heuristic to keep in mind is this: effective communication optimizes for the audience’s understanding. What are the implications of this? Primarily that how you communicate should be based off your judgments of what will be clearest for your audience. Everyone will have their own unique style (and that’s good!), but there are a few key tactics you should keep in mind which will help you deliver your message effectively:

  1. Structure your communication
  2. Read and react to your audience

Structure your communication

Structure, structure, structure! Many people think that communication is inherently fluffy. It is not. Great communication has great structure. Great communication helps maximize impact by providing the audience with a verbal framework up front and letting them populate it as you expound on the details. By providing a verbal framework for your thoughts, you are minimizing the work the audience needs to do to understand your point. That’s a win.

For example, if you’re concluding a case interview and your interviewer asks you to summarize the results, one option to begin listing off the key things you’ve learned and your final recommendation. However, a higher impact way to conclude would be to start with a verbal structure (e.g. “My recommendation is that the client take X course of action because of three key reasons. Those reasons are…”). The latter example leads with a verbal structure that makes the thinking crystal clear to follow.

Read your audience and react appropriately

You probably don’t speak to a dog the same way you speak to your boss. If you do, you are definitely not reading your audience! In that example, the delta is stark, so the tone, cadence, diction and style changes come naturally to most people. But what’s the difference between speaking to your boss who’ve you’ve known for two years and an interviewer you met five minutes ago?

Reading your audience will help you adjust your communication based off the facial (e.g. a look of confusion), verbal (e.g. “Sorry, I don’t understand that”) and physical (e.g. leaning back, disengaged) cues you might get from your interviewer. Utilize these clues to tailor your communication appropriately. For example, if your interviewer appears to be lost when trying to follow your train of thought, pause and explain your thinking. Conversely, if you’re interviewer is nodding vigorously at every point you’re making and agreeing with you, maybe you can shorten explanations for each point. Reading your audience successfully will take practice, but the good news is, you can literally practice in any conversation you have (not just interviewing)!

A final note

Effective communication is paramount. If you remember nothing else, remember this: the cornerstone of effective communication is optimizing for your audience’s understanding. Structuring your communication and reading the audience and making adjustments will get you eighty percent of the way there. Finally, if you’re struggling to get a read on your audience, a helpful tip is to err on the side of over communication. It’s easier to start there and dial back if your audience indicates they’re already on the same page.

Read part four here

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