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Given my background and recent Solve experience, what would be the best strategy to stay on McKinsey's radar and position myself for success in a future application?

I recently completed an MBA from a top UK business school and was invited to McKinsey Solve for London. Despite extensive prep, I didn’t progress this time. A few years ago, I had cleared Solve for a different role, so this was a bit of a setback.

My background is in SaaS product marketing, and I’m now considering a return to industry. I’m unsure how this will affect my chances of reapplying to McKinsey. Will it be seen as a step away from consulting, or can it still strengthen my profile?

I’d like to understand when I would be eligible to apply again and how best to maximise my chances next time. Would applying to other offices, like Brussels, be a sensible strategy?

I’d really appreciate any advice on how to navigate this phase and keep the consulting path open for MBB.

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Daniel
Coach
12 hrs ago
Ex-McKinsey, Bain & Kearney | 5+ yrs consulting, coaching & interviewing | 95%+ candidate success

You're asking all the right questions and you’re absolutely still in the game. Here’s how you can strategically stay on McKinsey’s radar and strengthen your positioning for a future application:

1. When can you reapply?

McKinsey generally enforces a 12-month reapplication window after a rejection especially post-Solve. That gives you time to rebuild and reposition your profile with intention.

2. How to position your next move (even if returning to industry)

Returning to industry, especially in a high-impact, strategic product role, is not a step back. If anything, it can:

  • Show ownership, leadership, and execution
  • Strengthen your business intuition and client orientation
  • Differentiate you from MBA peers with purely academic backgrounds

To make it work for you, look for roles where you can:

  • Drive cross-functional initiatives or product strategy
  • Own end-to-end results (not just comms or ops)
  • Interface with C-level or commercial teams (shows stakeholder exposure)

You can then frame this as "building practical leadership and business problem-solving experience ahead of re-entering consulting."

3. Consider applying to other offices with a plan

Yes, applying to offices like Brussels or Amsterdam can be a smart move if:

  • You have a strong language/cultural connection
  • You show genuine interest in the local economy or industries served
  • You’ve tailored your application to the needs of that office

Random cross-office applications are less effective unless you can clearly explain why.

4. Stay visible between now and your next application

  • Maintain light contact with McKinsey recruiters, occasional updates on new roles or achievements help
  • Attend open events or webinars hosted by the firm (some regional offices offer practice-specific sessions)
  • Stay active on LinkedIn, especially if you’re building thought leadership in SaaS, tech, or product strategy

5. Prep strategically for next time

When you're eligible again:

  • Reframe your story with industry-to-consulting relevance
  • Get coaching specifically on bridging product marketing into a generalist consulting narrative
  • Consider applying through a referral or experienced hire track if your industry exposure deepens

From what I have seen:

One rejection even post-Solve doesn’t define your candidacy. With the right positioning and proactive steps, you can absolutely make a strong comeback. And your SaaS + MBA combo is still a highly attractive profile for MBB, especially as digital and product strategy become more central.

Let me know if you'd like help refining your story or targeting a specific office, happy to support. Best of luck!:-)

Daniel
Coach
40 min ago
Ex-McKinsey, Bain & Kearney | 5+ yrs consulting, coaching & interviewing | 95%+ candidate success
Appreciate the feedback. I actually wrote this myself — just used a clear structure because that’s what I find most helpful when giving advice. It might resemble AI chatbot output because I follow the same logic-driven style we use in consulting. Either way, I shared it with the intention to help. If you’re unsure about my ability and think it’s copy-pasted, I’m happy to offer you a free coaching session to prove otherwise. I’ve just joined the platform, but feel free to check my reviews — I let the results speak for themselves. Best of luck!
Mariana
Coach
11 hrs ago
You CAN make it! | xMckinsey | 1.5h session | +200 sessions |Free 20-Minute Call

Hi there!

First of all, I’m sorry for the Solve outcome :/ to your questions:

“Will it be seen as a step away from consulting, or can it still strengthen my profile?” it depends on several factors including the results you will delivery and the brand recognition. Joining a T2 consulting firm could contribute more to your CV if MBB is what you really want. Also, it has the benefit of exposing you to the consulting work in a more balanced environment. This knowledge will contribute to your performance when you join MBB.

“I’d like to understand when I would be eligible to apply again and how best to maximise my chances next time. Would applying to other offices, like Brussels, be a sensible strategy?”
6-12 months is the typical range of cooling off period. The offices are connected, so applying to a different one won’t help you accelerate your process. Repeating myself here: See this is as an opportunity and look for roles in t2 and boutique consulting companies to build your consultant toolkit before joining MBB. This investment of time will pay off. 

Good luck!

Best,

Mari

Anonymous A
2 hrs ago
Hi Maria, I am the OP here. I agree with you wholeheartedly. However, two points: 1. T2 consulting in the UK is virtually not hiring 2. The ones who are hiring have really bad salaries compared to the industry. Would you say not joining T2 makes the entry difficult next year? For context the role was in Marketing and Growth Consultant at McK, something I already do in the industry.
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