Month: January 2009

Official site launch – thanks to Mergers and Inquisitions, and some useful consulting resources from around the web

Today marks the official launch of Management Consulted. I've been flying under the radar as I tried to establish some pillar content. Starting today, I'll be making a public push to spread the word about this site. If you're a new reader, you can do the following: Subscribe to the RSS feed Subscribe via email…

The Truth Behind Management Consulting Salaries: From Analyst Thru Partner

Consultant salaries are a topic many readers are dying to learn more about. We've gathered the data from our own experiences, clients who land offers, consulting colleagues, and public sources. They won't be 100% accurate but should be pretty close. One resource we've found valuable is the Consulting forums at WallStreetOasis. If you have already decided…

Preview of the upcoming “Consulting Bible” – the 2 most important and most common interview questions you’ll ever hear

Readers will notice that the posting rate has slowed here at Management Consulted. The reason? I've been developing a "Consulting Bible" - an insider's guide to consulting interviews that will cover: More than 50 fit/personality interview questions with example answers for each. I'm shooting for quality and not quantity - so mastering these 50 will…

How to Get Consulting Jobs from a Liberal Arts and Humanities Background

*courtesy of toothpaste for dinner*  Liberal arts and humanities majors are often criticized for being "soft majors" - with unchallenging classes and lack of "real world" skill development leaving them unable to land competitive business jobs. Fortunately for all the budding English and Philosophy majors out there, that's simply not true. It's very common for…

Engineering To Consulting: Career Change Strategy

Going from engineering to consulting is a great move. That's why we've created a series on entering consulting from "non-business" backgrounds - other posts include entering from liberal arts/humanities degrees and non-MBA grad schools. It's very common for engineers to be interested in consulting. It's a professionally demanding, well-compensated job which opens many doors in…