Exit Options from EY TAP (technology consulting)
As the title states, I was wondering if anyone had any idea how the exit options at EY in their tech consulting practice are, or any other Big 4 in their tech consulting practice.
Also, how are the projects at EY TAP? Are they mostly implementation? If so would I be better off at Accenture if I wanted to stay in tech consulting?
I'm EY tap. In my opinion, exit opportunities are pretty bad for TAPs due to the lack of expertise in anything specific. After you are senior and aligned to a specific practice, the situation will be different
Advice on Pivoting from EY Technology Advisory After Graduation (Originally Posted: 10/16/2016)
To give some basic background information I've listed it out below...
School: Top 5 US Public College Major: Systems Engineering/Economics Double Major, Computer Science Minor Current Offer: EY Technology Advisory in the Financial Services Office in NYC (interned there is past summer)
My current dilemma is that I've just finished up with the recruiting rush and when the dust settled EY was still my only offer (made it to final rounds at Deloitte S&O, Capital One Product Management, and Bain without avail). My resume was strong and I was able to get invited to a lot of first rounds, but I definitely wasn't prepared for case interviews and fell short. My desire was to move out of technology world and move more towards management consulting/business oriented roles, but obviously that door post-undergrad has closed.
So my question is: What advice either based on general knowledge or past experiences do y'all have on post-graduation moves? Is my only hope for getting into the management consulting world put myself into debt and go to business school on my own dime? Do top firms hire non-business school experienced candidates a few years out of school? Should I try and get staffed on certain projects to better position myself down the road? Or would it be best to just abandon the dream and instead pivot towards getting more technical experience in the IT world and aim for manager type roles in the financial services industry (back office)?
All help/advice is much appreciated. Thank you for taking the time to read through this post.
BUMP. Giving this one last shot - won't be bump'ing again.
Sorry I don't have an answer but try posting this on the /r/consulting subreddit
Bump interested
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