Financial modelling in consulting

Hi,

Does MBB consultants do any kind of financial modelling or other technical modelling / technical stuff in general?
What is the most "technical" thing in management consulting?

 
I'm an AI bot trained on the most helpful WSO content across 17+ years.
 

Yes, financial and other modeling is part of strategy consulting

In terms of the most technical stuff you'll have to do there's a high variance. I know people who are consistently using fairly advanced analytics platforms, and I also know people who have never opened Excel except to write down lists of names. I'd say the average is a mix of Excel, Tableau, and occasion Alteryx

Is there a particular reason you're asking?

 

Thank you for the reply. The reason of asking is that I am still in university and planning consulting as a future option. And I was thinking whether I should learn financial modelling or not beforehand.

 

Do learn excel / take an excel course if you can. I did this before starting and it has been immensely helpful. 
 

Don’t take a financial modeling course. I’ve taken one of these as well as preparation for a previous finance internship. They focus on the kind of modeling you would do in banking. You would use these kinds of models very rarely if at all in consulting so the ROI would be low if not zero. 

In general, I found the excel course helped me much more than the financial modeling course, even for financial modeling. 

 

To answer your question about the ‘most technical’ thing in consulting, we have people who do work in /with Python / machine learning / data science. The ceiling on how ‘technical’ you can get in consulting is actually much higher than it is in banking, which I feel like is rarely acknowledged in these types of forums. 
 

If you want to do that kind of work I would learn some of it before starting so it’s easier to get staffed in roles where you would be using those skills

 

I'd challenge the idea that these are separate paths. They are to an extent, but our more technical teams are being brought on to projects with increasing frequency. Which makes intuitive sense-if you have methods of more rigorous / advanced analysis, you would want to break those out wherever possible. 
 

Personally, I am working to develop a more technical toolkit so my staffing can be more flexible, not less. Someone who knows Python or SQL or any other technical skill can still be staffed on a more qualitative / slide heavy project where they don't use those skills, whereas someone without those skills is more limited

 

Tough to provide a comprehensive answer given that what the tools use vary widely across companies and even across teams within companies. 
 

Others have mentioned Tableau and Alteryx. At my company, I see a lot of ‘SQL preferred’ in our project staffing requests, and I had to use SQL on my first project despite not having a background in it. I’d bucked those in ‘I might have to use these at some point so learning them beforehand could be helpful’. But again, the preferred tools vary widely by company, so you might want to wait until you have an offer and then ask consultants at your specific firm what they use.

Learning something more complicated (Python, R, machine learning, whatever) would only be helpful if you want to do work using those skills. Unlike Tableau or SQL (or excel obviously), it is unlikely you will ever be asked to use something like Python on a project unless you already know it.

 

Yes, management consultants at MBB firms often do financial modeling as part of their work. This involves creating complex financial models to help clients make important business decisions. Other technical work that consultants may engage in includes data analysis, market research, and process optimization.

 
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Question: Is there financial modeling in consulting?

Yes, financial modeling is a common practice in management consulting. Financial modeling is the process of creating a quantitative representation of a real-world financial situation, typically using spreadsheet software.

Consulting firms often use financial modeling to help clients make informed decisions about complex financial situations, such as mergers and acquisitions, capital investments, pricing strategies, and cost-cutting initiatives. Financial modeling allows consultants to analyze data and make projections based on various assumptions and scenarios, which can help clients identify potential risks and opportunities and make better-informed decisions.

The level of financial modeling required in consulting can vary depending on the project and the client's needs. For example, some projects may require a basic financial analysis, while others may require more complex modeling, such as discounted cash flow analysis or scenario analysis.

Overall, financial modeling is a valuable tool for management consultants and is often used in combination with other consulting methodologies to provide clients with a comprehensive understanding of their financial situation and help them make strategic decisions.

"If you always put limits on everything you do, physical or anything else, it will spread into your work and into your life. There are no limits. There are only plateaus, and you must not stay there, you must go beyond them." - Bruce Lee
 

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