McKinsey interviewer led consulting case interview: free public Wi-Fi (w/ ex-BCG Consultants)

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 18 พ.ค. 2024
  • Here's a consulting case interview featuring an ex-BCG Consultant & ex-BCG Project leader focusing on an open-ended question that covers brainstorming and qualitative reasoning activities with some quant.
    🎥 Your Client is the government of a large city. (Think Chicago, New York or Los Angeles). They plan to provide all residents free wireless connection by building Wi-Fi hotspots covering the entire city. They hired McKinsey to help them determine whether or not they should do it.
    Watch Christopher Macrae Ham (ex-BCG Project Leader) run Matthew Calvert (Ex-BCG Consultant) through this mock consulting case interview.
    🎬 Video Sections:
    00:00 About the case
    00:51 Introductions
    03:37 Case question
    04:03 Clarifying questions
    05:22 Structuring
    08:10 Brainstorming Part 1
    11:12 Brainstorming Part 2
    15:17 Quantitative
    20:58 Synthesis
    21:38 Conclusion
    🚀 Prepping for case interviews? RocketBlocks has the best concepts, drills, and coaching to get you more consulting offers: www.rocketblocks.me/consultin...
    💡 Looking to become familiar with the consulting industry, the career opportunities, and the recruiting process? Our free consulting guide covers it all: www.rocketblocks.me/guide/con...
    ➡️ Book a 1-on-1 coaching session with Christopher here: www.rocketblocks.me/contribut...
    ➡️ Book a 1-on-1 coaching session with Matthew here: www.rocketblocks.me/contribut...
    #consultinginterviews #caseinterviewprep #BCG #consulting #mckinsey

ความคิดเห็น • 15

  • @nralpha63
    @nralpha63 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    I'm Nikhil Raigonde, from India doing an MBA currently. I want to thank you for making these case interview videos. I have learned a lot.

    • @rocketblocks
      @rocketblocks  10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Glad you enjoyed it! Subscribe for more mock interviews

  • @kloppsliverpudlians88
    @kloppsliverpudlians88 21 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I would have done this differently. Square area = 40x25=1000 sq ft. Circular area per hotspot = pi x r^2 = (3)(5)(5) = 75. Therefore you need at least 1000/75 = at least ~15 hotspots + some buffer for inevitable overlap

  • @hasmo42
    @hasmo42 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    Great video! I don't think the math makes sense though - should calculate area covered by each hotspot (pi * radius^2) and divide total area (40*25) by area per hotspot to get number of hotspots (approx 13) and multiple by cost to get $13M

    • @thegoonist
      @thegoonist 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      you cant do that. its a circle. i got 27 hotspots to cover the area.

    • @varadajitkshirsagar6880
      @varadajitkshirsagar6880 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      With all due respect, how did you come to 27 hotspots ? Isn’t dividing area of the rectangle by the area of one circle going to cover all the area? I understand it being a circle means having a few open spots but covering those would be an additional 7 hotspots, bringing us to a total of 20 hotspots (13 + 7).

    • @1Piece_Luffy
      @1Piece_Luffy 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I also got 27 hotspots. The secret is to draw out. Think of 8 golf balls, 5 cm radius each, tightly positioned from the top in the 40 cm x 25 cm gift box. You are basically covering up so that you cannot see any crevice from the sky. You will find 5 x 3 holes between the balls themselves and the balls and corners. You also need to add 4 more on the bottom, below each ball because there are 5 cm gaps. Therefore, you need 8 + 15 + 4 balls so that there is no black space from the helicopter view.

    • @nope2467
      @nope2467 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Actually 24 hotspots is enough, find a square in the circle which is approximately 7 x 7, you need 6 of it to cover the 40 unit wide (total to 42), and 4 to cover 25 unit height (total to 28). So 24 is sufficient
      How calculate the units of square in the circle, draw two radius 90 degree to each other, connects them and you will get the length of one side of the circle. Which is the square roots of 50, around 7 units. Hope this helps

    • @fouadljn7033
      @fouadljn7033 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@varadajitkshirsagar6880 I think the best way to approach the math is to consider the biggest square that can fit into a circle. This square will have a diagonal of 10 units. that means that the square has a side of root square 50 or the square has an area of 50. Finally, we can divide the total area (40x25)/50=20

  • @yingying-tz5zk
    @yingying-tz5zk 3 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Hi there, Thanks for making such a awesome video for us. Just a quick question, how long we can think of the clarifying questions? Is there any way we could speed up?

  • @francescobruzzone9099
    @francescobruzzone9099 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Didn't really get the process of solving the math question. Has anybody got that?

  • @nimbus2758
    @nimbus2758 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I don’t think he followed any structure, he was just giving launder list

  • @henriettaifyede1737
    @henriettaifyede1737 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Hi...can you (anyone) please explain the maths process (calculations)?

    • @pankajmehta655
      @pankajmehta655 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I think the way he went about is: 1. For a circle to compensate for the overlaps, consider them as square with the diameter as the diagonal of it.
      2. With that (although I am not sure he did it that way) you can estimate the side of the square. i.e 10/sqrt (2).
      3. Then you just calculate the number of squares that will be needed to fill the area of 40*25 units. Round off the sqrt (2) to 1.5 to make calc easier. Ballpark it's going to be around 28.
      Hope this helps.

  • @Ladyludagotsuga
    @Ladyludagotsuga 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    is there a clearer way to break down the math