Hi All,
I’m a recent grad from a semi- target American university (top 30) where I studied economics and doubled minored, ending with a 3.61 GPA. I had an internship in investment banking which I received a full time offer from and did not end up taking.
Instead, I joined an American volunteer program called the Peace Corps. For context, it’s a 27 month long program where you live in a rural community overseas and, in my case, advise/support local projects. This might entail advising local entrepreneurs, developing an economic development strategy for the community, applying for grants, etc. I’m about 8 months in.
I had solid extracurriculars while in university, including a leadership position in a consulting club on campus. I also worked 2-3 jobs throughout the 4 years I spent there which somewhat explains the low GPA.
I would love to hear people’s thoughts on the feasibility of me breaking into strategy consulting given my background. To be clear, I’m not interested in going to grad school for the time being. I would love to go to business school further down the line but I think I’ll still be too young when my program finishes up, and frankly I would love to make some money after being unpaid for 2 years. I also have enough debt as is. I’d like to know if it would be possible for me to go directly from my volunteer program to strategy consulting. I’m confident I’d love the work and I see the required skill set heavily overlapping with the work I’m doing presently.
I’m aware that my chances here are quite low, given my GPA and not being from a top target. But I’m willing to devote a significant amount hours every week to perfect my behaviorals and casing, and to network properly. I also have a very large timeline (19 months left in my program), which gives me more than enough time to prepare. My question here is: can extremely diligent preparation and networking make up for my weaker background?
I would really appreciate a direct answer here. My biggest fear is that I devote myself to preparing for these interviews only for them to never arrive.
My second question is: what recruiting cycle would I fall under? I would be interviewing for the entry level role, so business analyst/associate consultant. Does that mean I’d apply following the same cycle as university seniors recruiting for full-time roles? Or would I go through with off-cycle recruiting.
Last point I want to mention: my ideal office would be New York, or at the very least somewhere in that region, but I’m open to working anywhere in the world. I’m an American citizen but I’ve had internship experiences in various other countries, and am presently living abroad.
I’d also appreciate any general advice! Thank you so much in advance.