I have interviewed with MBB in the past few years and have done more than 70+ cases. However, I haven't done any case for 1 year. Today one firm called me and asked if I can interview for an urgent position. Would 2 weeks full time prep be enough to ramp up the casing skills?
Preparation time needed (have done 70+ cases but haven't cased for 1 year)
Hi There - congrats on getting an interview. The best way to know how close or far you are from distinctive performance is to get a benchmarking session with a Coach. Do a full mock interview (case + fit) and ask for their honest opinion. You will know. There are 2 possible paths after that
1) you are good with solo prep for 2 weeks (some mocks with peers and 1-2 polishing sessions with a coach especially on fit)
2) you need more time to get ready. This will mostly be because of your case performance. Fit it resolved a lot faster
If your assessment reveals that you are lacking certain fundamentals, (option 2 above) I would advise caution before hiring a coach. Coaches are not magicians who can resolve your issues in a short span, such as two weeks, especially under stress and pressure of approaching interviews. They can guide you on the correct approaches, fill in some knowledge gaps, direct you to the appropriate resources, but ultimately, it is your practice and dedication that will lead you to success. This process requires time to effectively integrate and apply new skills. In this case the best option would be to postpone your interview.
Thanks
Nilay
Hi there!
As always, more important than the number of cases is how your performance on them. It's a depth game rather than a numbers game in my opinion.
But assuming you actually had 70 good quality cases, with consistently improving feedback - I would say you should be in a good place even after a year!
Concretely, if you:
(1) Were in a good place at the end of last year
(2) Can spend a bit of time in the coming two weeks to polish your casing skills
(3) There is no meaningful way to postpone the interview (or postponing would hurt more then helping) …
… then I would suggest you give it a go and take the opportunity!
For point (2) above, this is one of the cases where it might make a lot of sense to actually get a paid coach on this platform (and I am not the one to suggest this too often, even if I am myself a coach!).
Good luck with your preparation!
Ariadna
Hi there,
The honest answer is that it's very hard to say without having seen you case.
- Are you using a robust approach or relying on memorized frameworks?
- Do you have any areas of weakness (e.g., structuring, charts, math, brainstorming, communication?)
- The 70 cases you worked on in the past:
- What was the quality of it? Quality > quantity
- What case partners did you work with?
- Did you achieve consistently good outcomes?
- Did you also incorporate individual drills (working on full cases is not very effective and efficient if you are targeting specific areas of weakness - see above)?
In general, two weeks is a tight timeline but if you had a consistently distinctive performance before, it's a skill you usually don't forget, like riding a bike. You might be rusty but able to get up to speed quickly again.
My tip:
- Focus on quality over quantity (coach, good practice materials, no generic cases, experienced case partners)
- Don't forget the fit interview
Reach out if you need help!
All the best,
Florian
Hello,
- Reflect on your previous interviews: analyze what you did well and where you think you could've done better.
- Revisit your stories for the fit part
- Review your frameworks
- Read few cases covering different types.
- Refresh your math skills
2 Weeks are enough for you to prepare well.
Reach out if you need help!
Best of luck.
Mostafa
Hi,
Thanks for reaching out to this community.
The answer is it depends. Given you did 70+ cases > a year back, two weeks should be good enough depending on how much time you are able to dedicate in the two weeks.
Assuming you can dedicate solid time to study and prepare, I would probably create a time table first and plan on what you want to acchieve in the two weeks to optimize time and track your progress. Some suggestions on what you may wnat to include as part of the plan:
1. Allocate some time to refresh your basics of case solving through any foundational books you may want to scan, old notes etc.
2. Review the 70+ cases you did (if you have marked them by difficulty level, that will be handy)
3. Practice with peers and if you have the budget a few cases with coaches.
Make sure to focus on type of cases asked by the firm - interviwer led, interviewee led and or when you do a case study and present.
2 and 3 above can be done together.
Hope this helps.
Thanks,
Sohini
The short answer is - your prep time depends entirely on your current performance level and how quickly you are able to get to the required proficiency to ace the case interview.
Given the amount of prep you have done in the past, it should theoretically be feasible for you to quickly get up to speed. There are a few things that matter here
- Time you are able to dedicate to preparation (case prep requires a lot of time and energy and without that progress will be stalled)
- Access to materials to prepare the right way
- Access to the right set of people who can help you prepare (ideally people that have gone through the process successfully themselves and understand the nuances and expectations well)
You may do well to hire a coach or find peers that are in consulting to help guide you given the time crunch.
Best,
Udayan
Well, you mention quantity… but:
- Can you provide a approach to any problem?
- Can you provide a good market estimate for all types of market estimates?
- Can you solve well “brainstorming” / qualitative questions
- Are you strong at exhibit interpretation?
Etc.
If you were good at these… then yes, 2 weeks are enough. Otherwise, there's some risk.