BCG alums kicked off their 1st interaction session with ISB student of co’2010. The enthusiasm of the batch was enormous, as 250 people turned up at 1130 in the night (skipping the 1st week survival party) to listen to the Gyan session which lasted till 2 am in the night.
BCG was represented by
Akshit Shah, Senior Associate (co’2007)
Jitesh Shah, Senior Associate (co’2008)
Some of my major takeaways from the session -
* Understanding the hierarchy and growth path at BCG

* CV
CV is the most critical tool to get short-listed. Alumni help during the duration of the course to help refine it. FOCUS ON THIS WELL, starting Term-3.
* Recruitment Process
BCG would get the resumes of people (~250 in co’2009) for the job-posting. The CV is critical. The BCG shall have panels to eventually shortlist 30-40 people for the interview. There are typically multiple rounds of interview and one may be rejected at any of the rounds. BCG does take into consideration your experience, undergraduate education while short-listing.
Mantra, as I understood is-
“Did you excel?â€
“Did you excel consistently?â€
* Spikes
It seems that spikes are essential for Consulting J Typically the spikes can fall into the categories of academics (at ISB or pre-ISB education), work experience, Co-curricular activities, and extracurricular activities.
In general I believe the non-academic Spike is a way to measure the passion and excellence one can achieve for the activity.
Some myths-
* Becoming a Club President is not a spike. What matters more is what you do as President or while being at ISB.
* Even without being President of any club there are examples of people who work hard towards activities which were well appreciated.
Some of the examples of the X-factor that could help in shortlisting-
* Enormous patents
* Doctor from AIIMS with exceptional work experience
As a thumb rule, without any spike it is difficult to be shortlisted, 1 spike is a grey area while 2 spikes can make a strong case for short-listing.
* Life @ Consulting
The typical work hours cited was 9 am – 8 pm if you are at the base location, while working at the client side this may be higher. Typically Akshit mentioned he worked for 30% of the weekends in last 2 years.
People do manage to get married and remain married J There have been instances when ISB alumni have taken 2 months off for paternal leave or 9 months off for maternal leave.
Also it was great to know that BCG attrition ratio is in single digits and most people who leave start on their own or to take up senior positions in the industry.
* Type of Projects/ Duration
The duration of the project can vary in general, and for Akshit the average seems to be ~ 4 months, and his longest being of 7 months.
* Difference between consulting firms
Typically the top consulting firms differ in terms of work culture and strengths in verticals.
* BCG operations @ India
BCG has operations in Bombay (since 1996) and Delhi (since 2002, ~30% of work force). The staffing resource pool is common between the two centers.
Related Links:
* Boston Consulting Group (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boston_Consulting_Group)
* BCG website (http://www.bcg.com/)
– Rahul Garg, Class of 2010.
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