While preparing for case interviews, there are two ways to read data that you will have to get used to:
To improve your proficiency in the first type of questions, you can refer to our tipsabout the test, and use our mental math tool to exercise your skills. In addition, you should also go through the official McKinsey guidelines and practice tests on their website, as they very closely resemble the actual test that you will face. In this article, we will focus on the second aspect, i.e. on how to analyze and communicate business insights in a case interview.
While tests like the McKinsey PST require you to calculate the answer precisely on your own, a case interview situation is quite different.
Typically, you will not be asked math problems in a case interview. However, data in various forms is likely to make an appearance in many different types of cases. For example, when you ask for market, customer or cost information while analyzing the case, the interviewer may provide you with a slide which has a few graphs detailing the various segments of the target market and various numbers (revenue, growth, etc.) pertaining to the segments. You are expected to:
This article will help you understand how to tackle data in a case interview, by providing helpful tips on what to do at each stage with examples from real-life case exhibits.
There are three forms in which data can be presented to you in a case interview:
Making sense of this information requires the same skills you will practice for the problem solving test. Let’s start with an example:
For a boot manufacturer that manufactures two types of boots, you have to plan a strategy for responding to a competitor who has launched a new product. To understand the market, you ask the interviewer how big it is. The exhibit below is presented to you.
Take the following steps to analyze this data:
In this case,
Now, do we have all information required to calculate the revenue? No! We need to know the number of boots bought per capita by each consumer segment. Quickly explain your approach to the interviewer and ask for the required information. Suppose he asks you to assume that every customer bought just one pair of boots in the last year. Now you have all the information needed to calculate the market size for the total boots category. However, you cannot calculate the size of the Work / Casual boots market separately since you only know the overall average price and not the category average for each. (While these individual prices for the categories can be calculated using simultaneous equations, this is definitely overkill for a case interview, and you should ask the interviewer for this information to calculate the different segments.)
Look at the graph for other interesting trends
Once you’ve achieved the main objective, you should look at the other obvious trends that the data shows. Get a general sense of the situation depicted, and look for trends across categories/years, or major aberrations. Don’t spend more than 5 seconds studying the graph, unless you see something especially striking or confusing. In this case for example, a basic observation is that blue collar workers buy more work boots than casual boots, and since they are paying more than the others on average, it could mean that work boots cost more than casual boots. Another observation is that the work boot category is significantly larger than the casual boot category.
Now that you have some numbers and an idea of the general trends shown by the data, you need to put it in the context of the overall case. This means understanding the business implication of the given data. Sometimes at the end of the analysis stage, you may realize that the data given to you has too many implications. Which are the ones most relevant to the case and current discussion? The following steps can help add more context to your analysis. Let us continue with the example of the boot manufacturing company discussed in the last section:
The final and most important step is synthesizing all the analysis and business reasoning that you just completed, and presenting it to the interviewer in an effective manner. The following aspects should be taken care of while communicating the inferences to the interviewer:
In this case, the situation can be possibly summed up as follows:
The total market size is €X Mn. My hypothesis is that the work boots category is the most important for us here, since it is €Y Mn larger than the casual boots segment. Do we have any information about our market share, and that of our competitors, in each of these segments?
While these are some things to keep in mind when faced with data in interviews, remember that practice is the best way to improve your data-reading skills. So keep practicing with peers and experts, in real life or over our platform.
Do you have any questions or remarks about this article? Let us know in the comments!