A&M - Alvarez and Marsal Interview Questions

5 total interview insight submissions
Interview Experience (97%)

The Interview Experience is a score from 1 star (very negative) to 5 stars (very positive) generated based on the Interview Insights at this company.

The number you see in the middle of the doughnut pie chart is the simple average of these scores. If you hover over the various sections of the donut, you will see the % breakdown of each score given.

The percentile score in the title is calculated across the entire Company Database and uses an adjusted score based on Bayesian Estimates (to account for companies that have few interview insights). Simply put, as a company gets more reviews, the confidence of a "true score" increases so it is pulled closer to its simple average and away from the average of the entire dataset.

4.5
  • Very Negative
  • Negative
  • Neutral
  • Positive
  • Very Positive
Interview Difficulty (86%)

The Interview Difficulty is a score ranging from very difficult (red) to very easy (green) generated based on the Interview Insights at this company.

The number you see in the middle of the doughnut pie chart is the simple average of these scores. The higher the number, the more difficult the interviews on average. If you hover over the various sections of the doughnut, you will see the % breakdown of each score given.

The percentile score in the title is calculated across the entire Company Database and uses an adjusted score based on Bayesian Estimates (to account for companies that have few interview insights). Simply put, as a company gets more insights, the confidence of a "true score" increases so it is pulled closer to its simple average and away from the average of the entire data set.

2.8
  • Very Easy
  • Easy
  • Average
  • Difficult
  • Very Difficult
% Interns - FT Offers (74%)

The % of Interns Getting a Full Time Offer chart is meant to provide a realistic estimate of the hiring practices of the company based on the reviews at this company.

The number you see in the middle of the doughnut pie chart is the simple average of these scores. If you hover over the various sections of the doughnut, you will see the % breakdown of each score given.

The percentile score in the title is calculated across the entire Company Database and uses an adjusted score based on Bayesian Estimates (to account for companies that have few reviews). Simply put, as a company gets more reviews, the confidence of a "true score" increases so it is pulled closer to the simple company average and away from the average of the entire data set.

80%
  • 0%
  • 10%
  • 20%
  • 30%
  • 40%
  • 50%
  • 60%
  • 70%
  • 80%
  • 90%
  • 100%

Interviews at A&M - Alvarez and Marsal

Filter by:
Year
Job Title
Group/Division
Location
Experience
Difficulty
Intern
Year 2025
Job Title Intern
Group/Division Restructuring
Location Chicago
Experience
Positive
Difficulty
Easy
1st Year Analyst
Year 2023
Job Title 1st Year Analyst
Group/Division Other
Location San Francisco
Experience
Very Positive
Difficulty
Average
Student / Prospective Monkey
Year 2024
Job Title Student / Prospective Monkey
Group/Division Consulting
Location London
Experience
Very Positive
Difficulty
Average
1st Year Associate
Year 2021
Job Title 1st Year Associate
Group/Division Valuation
Location Seattle
Experience
Positive
Difficulty
Average
1st Year Associate
Year 2021
Job Title 1st Year Associate
Group/Division Valuation
Location Seattle
Experience
Positive
Difficulty
Average

Interview Questions & Answers - A&M - Alvarez and Marsal Examples

Restructuring Summer Analyst Interview - Restructuring

Anonymous employee in Chicago
Interviewed: March 2025
Outcome
Accepted Offer
Interview Source
Applied Online
Length of Process
1-2 months
Application
Phone Interview
1 on 1 Interview
Interview
My first interaction with A&M took place during a case competition hosted by the Turnaround Management Association (TMA), where my teammate and I performed well. One of the judges—who happened to be a director at A&M—encouraged me to stay in touch and apply the following year. Thanks to that connection, I was able to move forward in the process with just one networking conversation before receiving a first-round screening interview.

A&M is not rolling and applications for 2026 Rx analyst opened January 1st, and were due by February 5th. On February 14th I got invited to a 20 minute screening call with HR. This one was quite straightforward: TMAY, Why Rx, Why A&M, Why You. That literally is it.

Afterwards, I got an update on March 4th, and was asked for availability for the 6th and 7th to get 2 first round interviews. These interviews primarily consisted of behavioral and background questions. You should be prepared to discuss your leadership and problem-solving experience, as well as have a basic understanding of restructuring at this stage. The first guy was a chiller, and we just talked about travel and why A&M is better than any firm he worked at before (lol). Started with a TMAY, asked why Rx, and afterwards just opened it up to any questions I had. The second guy was more serious. He was a senior Associate, and seemed kinda depressed and was dry. Regardless however, he asked me TMAY and why A&M, and also opened up the floor to any questions I had. Overall I feel like I was able to connect with them because of my work history. Entirety of HS I worked in fast food, and they really appreciated that.

Only 4 days after my last interview, I got invited for the final round, which consisted of 2 more interviews and an Excel assignment. The excel assignment was quite long and they gave me a week to do it prior to the interviews. It had 2 main sections, the simple excel test, which consisted of: Xlookup chains, Sumifs, Countifs, TextSplit, Ifs, Pivot tables etc. (Nothing too crazy). The second part however, was a real pain in the ass. Essentially you had to make an AP Aging Schedule for any overdue payables that a company may have. It had two parts to it: 1st clean up the data given to you by the company, and after make the schedule. The original data file was fucked, i’m talking, dates missing, vendors being typed all over the place, dates unclear. I would say I am very comfortable with excel, however it took me a solid 4/5 hours cleaning up that shit show. After that was done, you had to rank the 10 vendors with highest dues, and format them into a nice schedule with a few charts. The last part wasn’t that hard, and took me maybe 1 hour with me checking everything 5 times over. The file needed to be submitted within a week, and we were supposed to go over it during one of the interviews.

First one was a senior Associate who was my Alumni. She was super sweet and the interview felt light: TMAY, Why Rx, What are indicators of Distress, Causes of distress, and solutions to distress. Afterwards she opened up to questions. My next, and final, interview was with a Senior Managing Director. Ngl I was stressing for this one. It started with the usual small talk, and then he briefly mentioned he was working on the Red Lobster Bankruptcy. By the stroke of luck it was my favorite case and I literally knew everything about it. We spent the next 40 min talking about it and the future, and he was really digging it. He asked me my opinions about the case, and also wondered about why Rx consulting and not Rx Banking. As soon as the interview ended, I felt like I was gonna get it. Funny enough they never brought up the Excel assignment, but I assume I was good enough. 4 days later I get a call from HR saying I got the offer.

Final advice: Please, come with at least 5 good questions prepared. The vast majority of my interviewers wanted me to ask questions for over 20 min. My rule was, ask about their, ask about the firm, and ask about transitioning. This seemed to work well, and gave them a chance to open up. I suggest scouting their linked-in and figuring out their past to ask about it.
Interview Questions
Honestly, there weren't any questions during the interviews that really caught me off guard or felt overly difficult. Most of the behavioral and technical questions were pretty standard: TMAY, Why Rx, Why A&M, and some basics around distress indicators and solutions. That said, the Excel assignment was definitely not easy. It took me about 5 hours just to clean up a very messy data set for the AP Aging Schedule portion, and while I'm comfortable in Excel, it pushed me to stay super organized and meticulous.

The most technical and in-depth part of the process came during my final interview with a Senior Managing Director. He happened to be working on the Red Lobster bankruptcy, which I had done a deep dive on prior. We ended up spending about 40 minutes talking through the case, and the conversation got pretty granular—covering the capital structure, operational decisions, and possible paths forward. It wasn’t a formal technical drill, but it was clear he knew the case inside and out, so I had to be sharp and thoughtful with my responses. That back-and-forth ended up being one of the most rewarding parts of the process, and it showed I knew my shit and helped me really connect with him.

transaction advisory group intern Interview - Other

Anonymous interview candidate in San Francisco
Interviewed: November 2023
Outcome
Declined Offer
Interview Source
Employee Referral
Length of Process
Less than 1 month
Application
Phone Interview
1 on 1 Interview
Interview
Overall pretty chill. 1st I had 2 rounds of interviews over zoom, one technical analysis with VP and one with behavioral with MD. Then 1 zoom call kind of interview with someone to talk about inclusivity at the company. Finally a somewhat super day with 3 interviews + lunch. Technical analysis was not very difficult, know about private equity deal cycle, what quality of earnings is and stuff like that.
Interview Questions
What diversity and inclusion means to you

Summer intern Interview - Consulting

Anonymous employee in London
Interviewed: November 2024
Outcome
Accepted Offer
Interview Source
Employee Referral
Length of Process
1-2 months
Application
1 on 1 Interview
Skills Test
Personality Test
Interview
Was referred via an employee in a different office to where I applied for. First interview was an introduction and opportunity to showcase my skills and motivations for the role. Second was a bit more specific to PEPI but still conversational and informal. Possible 3rd interview upcoming with the possibility of a short and informal case study they said.
Interview Questions
CV walk through

Why PEPI and why A&M?

Associate Interview - Valuation

Anonymous employee in Seattle
Interviewed: March 2021
Outcome
Accepted Offer
Interview Source
Recruiter
Length of Process
Less than 1 month
Application
1 on 1 Interview
Group Interview
Interview
Contacted by recruiter for a one one with managing firector. Follow up was a group interview with directors
Interview Questions
Was asked to describe why i wanted to deitch from audit to valuation
video
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