Q: What does consulting work look like – is it fulfilling and fun? Do I need statistics knowledge?
Hi, Krishna,
To the first part of your question, let me agree with Gaurav in the previous answer. The consulting work and apprenticeship journey are very fulfilling and fun. Not only do you learn a lot and at a fast pace, with tons of support from peers, mentors and professional development staff, but also you can clearly see that you are generating meaningful impact on the client. As for the fun part, yes, it is very fun! Since you spend a decent amount of time in the team room with your team building analysis, discussing storylines presentations, trying to beat the clock, you start sharing your anxiety, questions, accomplishments with your team members and bond with them. It starts as a nerd-like type of fun and then you gradually expand it to other domains with the people you can most relate with. The only thing to have in mind, in my opinion, is that it is an intense job, both in terms of pressure and working hours. So you will likely start off with plenty of energy but then, after a few months, you can start feeling tired and stressed. At that moment you should consider taking some rest – although it sounds obvious, there are many people who do not take vacations. Having said that, if you considering to give a shot to consulting, I fully encourage you: make a preparation plan, study, be consistent and go for it. I never met someone that regretted working in consulting – seeing it as waste of career time – or only preparing for consulting interviews – it will definitely be helpful to other career interviews.
For the second part, although firms hire people from different backgrounds, one is expected to be very familiar with basic math concepts, not necessarily statistics. No need to be brilliant or do math in your head, but you should manage basic math operations well, be able to round numbers to approximate solutions, recognize orders of magnitude, etc. If this is your Achilles' heel, don’t panic: there are many support materials with techniques and exercises that allow you to get up to speed within a short time. Let me know if need tips on that.
Best of luck in your journey!