Million Dollar Spatula: An MBA Fantasia on International Themes – Served Hot!

The Blogger Analyzes the 2006 INSEAD Career Decisions Report

June 4, 2007 · 7 Comments

Hotter than the Latest Harry Potter Novel

I’ve done the number crunching and it gives me great pleasure to present the exclusive Million Dollar Spatula cutting-edge analysis of the INSEAD 2006 MBA Careers Report. For many would-be INSEAD applicants and students there are only two relevant questions: 1) What are my chances of getting hired by a McBain-class Consulting Firm?; and 2) What are my chances of getting hired by a Bulge Bracket–class Investment Bank?

And so with the freshly-imparted wisdom of my pre-MBA accounting and finance readings, I have developed a series of analysis ratios to answer the foregoing questions. Before we start, I need to explain my methodology and the underlying assumptions behind my analysis. I am a firm believer in segmenting job seekers by functional sector. If you are determined to work in consulting after graduation, then you are not really competing against all 881 graduates for the same pool of consulting jobs, but rather your competition is the 35% (or 308 students) from your class who choose consulting. Although it’s conceivable that some students might simultaneously target two or more functional sectors, based on my discussions with INSEAD students and alumni, graduates tend to hold out for a position in their desired segment. And so I maintain that if a student is determined to focus on a particular sector, he/she will accept a less desirable job within that sector rather than switch fields.

In 2006, the McBain Consulting Ratio™ which I define as the percentage of INSEAD MBA grads who chose consulting and accepted offers from McKinsey, Bain, or BCG was an impressive 51% (157/308). This number must be further controlled for Company Sponsored Students who return to their previous employer. For example, last year McKinsey & Co. hired 75 INSEAD MBA grads, but 27 of those coveted slots went to returning consultants who had previously worked for the firm. So the Adjusted McBain Consulting Ratio™ is 41% (105/256), which is still a fantastic yield. This means that any INSEAD student with no previous connection to a McBain Consulting Firm, who focuses exclusively on consulting, has a 41% chance of landing a position at one of these firms. The rest of the class who choose consulting do of course end up at other excellent name brand consulting firms including L.E.K., Roland Berger, Diamond, Accenture, and Booz Allen.

In 2006, the Bulge Bracket Ratio™ which I define as the percentage of INSEAD MBA grads who chose I-Banking and received offers from Citigroup, Merrill Lynch, Deutsche Bank, Morgan Stanley, Credit Suisse, HSBC, Lehman Brothers, or UBS was 23% (58/255). The actual number is higher, because INSEAD did not report the precise number of students going to some Bulge banks such as Goldman Sachs, but when adjusted for returning students, the Adjusted Bulge Bracket Ratio™ is 20% (50/247).

The aptly-named Combined Adjusted Bulging McBain Ratio™ (aka Job of Your Dreams Ratio) which combines the consulting and banking ratios while controlling for returning employees is 31% (155/503). This means that attending INSEAD affords you an almost 1 in 3 chance of landing the job of dreams, assuming that you want to work for a Bulging McBain company. But who knows… the job of your dreams might be in another industry such as technology, pharmaceuticals, or energy.

Most noticeably absent from the official INSEAD Careers Report (well other than the absence of the Combined Adjusted Bulging McBain Ratio™) is a qualitative self-assessment of career success measured against each student’s own expectations. I would like to see satisfaction statistics on student opinions of whether they found the functional job they wanted, in their targeted industry, and with their employer of choice. Such data is generally not collected by business schools, but I think the results might reveal as much, if not more, than the numbers disclosed in the Careers Report.

Categories: Career · INSEAD · MBA

7 responses so far ↓

  • D.T.L.F. @ INSEAD // June 5, 2007 at 7:51 am | Reply

    Can I copy your finance class notes?

    As someone mentioned on NV, it’d also be extremely interesting to see a juxtaposition of pre-INSEAD and post-INSEAD salaries.

  • Res I(p)sa // June 5, 2007 at 8:59 am | Reply

    love it; do you have one of those calculators that also makes your coffee and picks your socks up off the floor, and can you use it to determine the percentage of students that start out wanting to join the mcbain/bulge bracket firms but then realise life’s too short?

    -MDS Responds:
    I reject the notion that people will seek and then inevitably regret working in I-Banking, Consulting, Big Law, etc. I’ve read the “Wall Street whiner canon” of tell-all books written by MBA and law graduates who demand that we shed tears of empathy over their ‘misfortune’ of having to work 12 hour days that don’t resemble L.A. Law and the Apprentice. Having worked in a professional services firm and now in industry, I have a more mature perspective. There are advantages and disadvantages of each. I’m bothered by your “Life’s too short” comment. It’s not clear to me what alternative you’re advocating to consulting and I-banking. Are you championing entrepreneurship? A career in industry? Screenwriting? Innkeeping? Winemaking? It’s hard for me to evaluate your criticism of consulting and finance without more insight into what you view as the ideal career choice.

  • Res I(p)sa // June 6, 2007 at 8:32 pm | Reply

    The ideal career choice? mmm….. wine-making, definitely ;)
    I never said I wasn’t going to get sucked in to consulting or i-banking myself, some people love the pain, the perks, and the ability to pay back student loans without having to resort to highway robbery.
    (and trust me, if I’d had a job with only 12-hour days, I never would have left it!)

  • Pradeep // June 8, 2007 at 4:27 am | Reply

    Hi MDS,
    Thats a nice analysis you’ve put up. From your analysis, I get the feeling its much tougher to obtain a BBB out of INSEAD than it seems.
    In other words, do career changers looking at IB, have a realistic chance??
    PS: Were all Consult/IB jobs offered at Associate level positions?

    MDS Responds: No question it’s harder to get into Finance from INSEAD. The main feeder schools for banking are LBS, Harvard, Wharton, Tuck, and Chicago. The two year program helps, as does the heavier quantitative emphasis. The level of job offers is usually a function of previous experience. If you were a consulting/banking associate pre-MBA, then there’s a chance you will be hired post-MBA at a higher level. The main clue to this, is the salary range. The 1-2 ‘outliers’ at $175,000 have clearly “been there and done that” and are now going back to manage a group. Be aware of the wide range of jobs in banking. There are clearly compensation (and career prospect) differences between the more sexier departments and the more service-oriented departments.

    -MDS

  • Mark // June 25, 2007 at 4:08 pm | Reply

    After having completed a BAA and Msc in Finance from top Schools and CFA and CPA certifications, I’m nowhere near the kind of job I could land if I had done a 10-months MBA at Insead.
    I guess I’m really stupid
    MDS Responds:
    You’re not stupid. You’re just on a different path. Each of us rolls the dice and takes our chances based on our intelligence, wealth, and available opportunities. You sound like you have a solid background for CFO jobs. Sometimes the grass seems greener… what if you had attended INSEAD and graduated at the bottom of your class in a recession year, and you had blown the only interview chances you had, through poor performance? You might find yourself in the same position as now. The single greatest asset you have is you ‘dissatisfaction’. Were you content with your lot, you would never take the risks that will ultimately carry you to success.
    -MDS

  • The Blogger Reflects on his Blog Statistics and “McKinsey & Company” as a Key Driver of Webxite Hits « Million Dollar Spatula: An MBA Fantasia on International Themes - Served Hot! // September 14, 2007 at 9:43 pm | Reply

    [...] get enough about “The Firm”. My all time most popular posting was my analysis of the 2006 INSEAD Careers Decision Report. It would not be an exaggeration to say that I could significantly increase my traffic and page [...]

  • Rawdawg // February 17, 2008 at 10:07 pm | Reply

    I’m a current INSEAD student and had some perspectives.

    First, a partner here at INSEAD happens to also teach an equity research course at LBS (dual PHD from HBS). He thinks INSEAD is far more technical than many other schools, specifically LBS. Don’t believe everything…

    Second, and more importantly, the ratio analysis is completely off. Career switchers — I’m one — ruin that analysis. There are many who switch, and there are many more who simultaneously pursue multiple industries. Your blog is pretty much off until the last paragraph. Spot on with that one….

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