Consulting interviews are among the most demanding in any industry. They test a specific combination of structured thinking, communication under pressure, and business intuition that is distinct from most other interview formats. The good news is that the format is well-known and highly learnable with the right preparation. The bad news is that "winging it" is particularly obvious in a case interview.
The two parts of every consulting interview
Almost every consulting interview has two components: a case interview (a business problem you work through live) and a personal fit interview (why consulting, why this firm, tell me about a time you led through ambiguity). Both are important. At top-tier firms, a perfect case with a poor fit interview will still get you rejected.
The case interview: what it is and how to do it
The case is a business scenario you're asked to analyse: a company's profits are declining, a client is considering an acquisition, a retailer wants to enter a new market. You're given some data and asked to work through it live with the interviewer. The interviewer is evaluating your process, not just your conclusion.
The key behaviours to demonstrate:
- Structure first. Before diving in, say: "I'd like to take a moment to structure my approach." Then lay out your framework explicitly.
- Think out loud. Interviewers cannot evaluate reasoning they cannot hear.
- Quantify where possible. Estimates and numbers are expected, even when data is incomplete. Make your assumptions explicit.
- Lead with the answer. After working through the case, start with your recommendation, then the supporting reasoning.
- Profitability: Revenue vs. Cost. Within each: volume, price, product mix, fixed/variable cost.
- Market entry: Market attractiveness (size, growth, competition), company fit (capabilities, resources, risks).
- Merger and acquisition: Strategic rationale, financial attractiveness, integration feasibility.
- Growth strategy: Organic (new products, new markets, increased share) vs. inorganic (M&A, partnership).
The fit interview questions
"Why consulting?"
"I want to work on a wide range of high-stakes business problems in a compressed timeframe, which is hard to replicate in any other career at this stage. I've had exposure to [specific consulting-adjacent experience] and what I've noticed is that I thrive when I have to go deep on a problem quickly, structure a clear recommendation, and communicate it to people who need to make a decision. Consulting is the environment where that's the core job, not a side element."
"Why this firm specifically?"
"Three things: the firm's work in [specific practice area where you have genuine interest], the culture of [something specific you know about this firm's working style from research], and conversations I've had with [people at the firm you've spoken to]. I did this research because I want to join a firm I'll genuinely thrive in, not just any consulting firm."
How to practice effectively
Case interviews require deliberate verbal practice, not reading. The most effective preparation is doing cases out loud with a partner who gives real-time feedback. Resources: Case in Point (book), PrepLounge (online cases with partners), RocketBlocks, and firm-specific practice cases on company websites. Aim for 30-50 practice cases before your first real interview if targeting a top-tier firm.
Fit stories should be prepared in STAR format with specific, compelling examples. Have at least five stories ready to cover: leadership, impact, team conflict, failure, and your "why consulting" narrative. The same story can often be adapted for multiple questions.