Sounds pretty legit for a freshman. I would say most people who intern at MBB didn't have as good of a freshman summer internship (if they had one at all). The main two things right now are to keep your grades very high and try to network with any alumni at your school who work at MBB. While your internship will definitely help you out, it's less important than grades at this point.

 

Thanks for the reply!

I was mostly curious because everyone has been telling me stuff about how E&Y Consulting is the biggest joke amongst all of the Big 4 Consulting, and it'd be a stain on my resume I wouldn't want. Good to hear that it's legit.

I'm an American undergrad at a target school in Asia, with a 3.3 GPA (school has pretty bad grade deflation). What GPA do you think I should aim for to have a somewhat-decent shot at consulting?

 

Whoever telling you that is incredibly elitist. An internship at E&Y during freshman summer will be fine. Nobody who matters is going to look down on you for it. Try to kill it your sophomore year and bump up your GPA to above 3.5. I'd say 3.5 is minimum threshold for MBB. I'm not sure if there are differences for recruiting from schools in Asia, so I can't really speak to that, only what I know for schools in the U.S.

 

Another vote for whoever has been telling you E&Y is a 'stain on your resume' is an idiot. That's a really stupid thing to say- it's a great firm and will be helpful for whatever you want to do in the future.

I previously worked for McKinsey in London and have started a blog about consulting and how to get into it at www.theconsultingcoach.com
 

To put it this way - it will absolutely not decrease your chances of MBB. Secondly, you do see experienced hires go from big 4 advisory to MBB, so absolutely a great place to gain experience. Lastly, you are a freshmen, as mentioned above that is a solid experience to have that early in your career.

That with some ECs and a higher GPA will give you a good chance I think

 
Best Response

It's definitely going to help your chances but I wouldn't bank everything on this internship. Like others have mentioned, grades are the most important thing at this point. Keeping up with extracurricular/leadership experiences is also important.

Most MBB interns don't have much (if any) actual consulting experience during undergrad. Ppl with big4 or tier two firm experience aren't that common and those who do have it definitely get the recruiter's attention when they apply.

It also helps a lot with networking. Having that experience under your belt when you network brings more legitimacy to your desire to be a consultant. You can really play on the fact that you've experienced the industry and love it as opposed to other candidates who are trying to sell how passionate they are about something they've never done. Also when you reach out to ppl, you won't seem like a waste of their time if they do try to help you out:)

Once you are there make sure you network hard with ppl on your team and also use that company email address of yours to reach out to other EY groups in North America. If you don't land MBB at least you can arrange smth with EY in the states as a safety net.

 

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