What are Case Interviews and How to Ace Them

case interviewsConsulting companies like McKinsey and BCG invented the case interview method.  Now pretty much all consulting firms as well as many hiring managers outside of consulting use the case interview to help them identify the best candidate for a business job opening.

So what is an case interview?  Simply, it’s when the interviewer gives you a scenario (like a business situation or an interpersonal situation) and ask you questions about how would you go about addressing it.  This method works well in interviews because the scenario and their related questions (aka the case) often has nothing to do with the interviewee’s past work experience.  It is designed to be a complete surprise so that the interviewer can test your true capabilities as a business candidate

There are 3 types of case interviews.  To ace each, you, as the candidate need to understand what the interviewer is really expecting you to demonstrate

Type 1 – Brain teaser cases – This is usually very short – like 5 to 10 minutes where the interviewer asks you to estimate the size of a particular market.  My very first brain teaser from McKinsey was “Estimate the size of the tennis ball market in Hong Kong.” What the interviewer expect are

  • You are not afraid to ask questions and if the interviewer ask you to make an assumption that your assumption is reasonable. to show common sense.
  • You communicate a sound framework of how you will get to the answer
  • You demonstrate good business sense by including all the obvious players that affects this estimate.  (e.g., individual tennis players and also businesses like tennis clubs that would buy tennis balls)
  • You can do basic math in your head.  While the interviewer doesn’t expect you to get to the right answer, they do want to see you can follow your own logic and assumption to an answer.  Saying 10% of 50M is 500K will not impress.  Tip – keep your number simple and general so the math is easier to do in your head.
  • You are poised, clear, and structured in your communication under pressure

The two most common mistakes people make in this type of case are: 1) trying too hard to get to the right answer but ignoring the process  2) not asking enough questions or making enough assumptions. What the interviewer don’t expect from you

  • Interviewer does not expect you to know all the world’s trivia like population of Hong Kong
  • Interviewer does not expect you to get the right answer.  This is not the point of the exercise

Type 2 – Business case interview – This is usually 30 minutes long and can get very involved.   Very often the interviewer will give you a case that they just worked on.   This way they have spent several months knowing the industry and the business situation and can give you details easily when you ask questions.  Additionally, they can judge very quickly whether you would have been an asset on the team if you actually worked on this case with them. What the interviewer expect from you

  • Sound listening and questioning skills – In business, we often do not get the complete picture of a situation when we first encounter it.  It is key for you to listen carefully to the initial case and ask sound questions to get a more complete picture
  • Strong business and analytical skills – Depending on the level you are applying for (Analyst vs. Associate), the interviewer have a level of expectation of your level of business knowledge, financial knowledge, strategic frameworks, and how analytical your answer should be.
  • Ability to communicate how you plan to solve the problem in a structure framework – don’t communicate one idea at a time.  It’s better to pause to think and then say something like I would look at this issue from 3 angles and explain what each angle is.  Also important to use known framework (SWOT, Porter 5 forces, 3Cs) correctly if it makes sense
  • Able to think under pressure – I had one McKinsey partner who kept asking me, what else can I think of after I gave him my initial structure of how to think of the problem.  Interviewer will try to say things to rattle you the same way a client may when you become the consultant.  You need to demonstrate that you can be poised even if you don’t know all the answers

At the end of the day, each interviewer is asking themselves as they interview you – “Would I want him or her on my team? and would I be comfortable with him or her speaking with my client?”

Type 3 – Behavioral case interview – This is where the interviewer tells you about a difficult interpersonal situation (e.g., with your client, team member, manager, etc..) and ask you how you would handle it.   This is a relative new type of case interviews.  Companies do not consistently use it but it’s good to be prepared when they do What the interviewer expect from you

  • Emotional intelligence – can you fully understand what are the underlying interpersonal issues and what is at stake if it’s not resolved?  Do you have your priorities straight?  (e.g., getting the job done and maintaining good relationships are key.  Being right is not)
  • Diplomatic communication – Do you know how to diffuse a heated situation effectively to get the work done?  Can you communicate in a way that foster better relationships?
  • Level of self awareness – Do you know what you can and cannot control in this situation and what to do about each?
  • Your ethical boundaries – understanding where your line is and whether that is a fit for the company.

Again, as the interviewer uses this type of interview, he or she wants to see that you are a team player who understand the importance of maintaining good relationships to achieve results and not some ego maniac that the team or the client would not want to work with.

The other key component to acing the case interview is practice, practice, practice.  It is not enough to practice on your own with a sample case book.  It is important to practice with other people.  The best people to practice with are consultants or ex-consultants who are senior to you and worked in firms you want to work in.

Don’t be afraid to ask these kind of people for help. When I applied for McKinsey out of college, I was lucky to meet a Stanford MBA student through a family friend who used to work at McKinsey.  He gave me a huge binder filled with the research he did to get into McKinsey.  He was also kind enough to practice cases with me and gave me honest feedback.  That was invaluable.

Your comments:   What have your done to ace case interviews?  Share your comments below

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Good luck with your case interviews.

I am always in your corner.

Lei

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Joanna
9 years ago

Thanks for the article, Lei! Practice is indeed key! I used to practice with case partners who had the same skill level as I, because I didn’t know or couldn’t afford to practice with (ex-)consultants. A good platform where I found my case partners (and where you can also practice with (ex-)consultants) is http://www.preplounge.com.

10 years ago

Great advice Lei. One other thing I coach candidates regarding case interviews is to try to answer the cases based on information you’ve gained from your interactions with the interviewer. This gives them confidence that you didn’t luck out having a case on a topic you had lots of prior knowledge about; they want to be sure that your performance would have been replicated no matter what the case had been about. Plus it forces you to work with the interviewer, which usually results in a better outcome. Hope this is helpful

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