Case study interviews are used to test how you think through problems, not just what conclusions you reach. This distinction is important: interviewers are watching your process as much as your output. A candidate who reaches a good answer silently and then announces it is less impressive than one who thinks out loud, asks good clarifying questions, and reaches a reasonable answer through a structured approach.

Types of case study interviews

Consulting-style cases involve business problems: how would you help a client in declining market share, what would you do to improve profitability, how would you size a market. These follow specific frameworks (MECE, issue trees, profitability trees) that are worth practising.

Role-specific cases are more common outside consulting. A product manager might be asked to design a feature. A marketing manager might be asked to develop a campaign strategy. A data analyst might be given a dataset and asked to find insights. These test domain knowledge alongside structured thinking.

Take-home cases give you 24-72 hours to prepare a presentation or document. These are less about thinking on your feet and more about the quality of your analysis and how you communicate it.

How to structure your approach

For any case, before you answer:

  1. Clarify the objective: "Before I dive in, can I confirm the goal is to [X]?" A well-framed problem is half solved.
  2. Ask for any data you need to make reasonable assumptions.
  3. State your framework: "I'm going to approach this by looking at [A], [B], and [C]." This signals structured thinking.
  4. Work through each area methodically, noting what matters and what you can set aside.
  5. Lead with your recommendation, then the supporting reasoning. Don't bury the conclusion at the end.
Universal case structure that works across industries
  • Clarify the objective and constraints
  • State your framework for analysis
  • Gather or state assumptions where data is missing
  • Work through each component, quantify where possible
  • Synthesise: what does this mean?
  • Lead with recommendation, then rationale
  • State what additional data would change your view

How to communicate your thinking

Think out loud. Interviewers in case interviews are specifically listening to how you reason. Saying "I'm not sure yet, but I think the key issue is either X or Y, and I'm going to explore X first because it seems higher impact" is a good answer even before you've resolved the question. Silence is not.

Write or draw as you think. Sketching a structure or a simple calculation on paper (or sharing your screen) keeps the interviewer anchored in your process and gives you something to refer back to.

The behavioural parts of case interviews still matter
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Common case study mistakes

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Frequently asked questions

How do I practice case study interviews?
Find a practice partner and do cases out loud. Websites like Case in Point, PrepLounge (for consulting), and role-specific books give structured practice cases. The most important thing is to practice verbalising your thinking: reading cases and thinking through them silently doesn't build the same muscle as speaking through them under time pressure.
Do I need to know specific frameworks like Porter's Five Forces or MECE?
For consulting roles, yes: frameworks are expected and assessors know them. For non-consulting roles, you don't need named frameworks but you do need a structured approach. "I'd look at this from the customer, the market, and the operational side" is a framework even if you don't name it. The named frameworks become useful shorthand when everyone in the room knows them.
What if I make a calculation mistake in a case interview?
Catch and correct it: "Wait, let me recalculate that." Most interviewers are not testing arithmetic: they're testing whether you know when numbers matter and whether you can identify when an estimate is unreasonable. A candidate who catches their own error and corrects it is often more impressive than one who gets the right answer first try.
What should I do with a take-home case study?
Lead with the recommendation, not the analysis. Executives and hiring managers read the conclusion first. Structure it as: recommendation, key supporting rationale (two to three points), then the analysis behind each point. Keep it visually clean. And respect the time limit or suggested length: going significantly over signals you can't prioritise.