Note: I reference our second & third posts a lot, which will be published in a few days!
How long do you think it takes to pick up the vast majority (say >80%) of the transferable skills mentioned? I.e. is it likely that an optimal strategy may be to go into a top consulting firm for 1-2 years and then use the skills, brand and connections to do something more directly impactful?
Gain some of the transferrable skills could take a 1-2 years, although 1 year seems on the low end to me. As you progress in your consulting career you will get different kinds of responsibiities (e.g. directly interfacing with senior clients). We talk a little more abou this on our next posts.
This 80% rule woudnât apply the connections you make. As you progress in your consulting career youâre going to make more connections, and often more important connections (e.g. to senior-level partners and clients). We talk about this in our third post
We think the industry experience you gain is more valuable (we cover getting stafffed on relevant projects in our second post), but it take longer to get (in most cases >2 years to be staffed on specific topics).
We cover some considerations about if/âwhen to leave consulting in our third post and â% of transferrable skills acquiredâ is one part of the considerations for leaving.
Roughly what proportion of consultants you interviewed/âin the EA and Consulting Network are pursuing this strategy vs those who think they can maximise the impact of their career by staying in consulting longer term?
We donât have exact numbers. Most of the consultants we interviewed were still in consulting, but we expect our sample was biased because people in the EACN are more likely to be consultants. The decision to pursue one strategy over another is very dependent on how you want to have an impactâwhat cause areas you want to contribute to, and what career path you aspire to follow.
2) Do you have a sense of what proportion of EAs end up staying in consulting longer than planned /âthan would be optimal from an impact perspective due to value drift? More concretely, Iâm thinking of how the temptation to maintain a high salary or pursue the next promotion or the lack of time to spend considering other options might delay peopleâs exit longer than is optimal.
We did not explicity ask this, and I think it would be hard to gauge without doing a much more in-depth survey.
I would say that âvalue driftâ implies that your values change, I think âlifestyle driftâ might be more accurate (see this post for more) RE: salary /â promotion. There are other reasons as well, such as status quo bias, risk aversion, or being too distracted to think about your values (see Habibaâs quote above). I wouldnât consder these âvalue driftâ per se. Ancedotally, 1 ex-consultant said they wished theyâd left earlier, though I wouldnât consider them having value drifted since they were incredibly engaged in EA before they joined consulting, and are now working at EA-aligned organisations.
The above reasons would be true for jobs in tech, finance etc. and arenât unique to consulting.
3) Any successful case studies to support this: âYou could potentially shift the project portfolio of your consulting firm towards more impactful opportunities (especially in a senior role like partner), and influence existing projects to be more effectiveâ?
This is covered in our second post.
4. You wrote, âYou can develop expertise in a specific area or industry early in your career, even when you donât have a background into the topic through on-the-job learning, training opportunities, direct exposure to expertsâ. You also said that âManagement consulting firms expect new consultants to spend time working across various industries before specializing, which could delay the start date for you to focus on your areas of interest by a few years.â Are you saying (1) it is possible to develop expertise in a specific area but only after a few years; (2) even in the first few years you can develop some level of expertise on each of your projects, but itâs more broad than deep; (3) something else?
In most cases we think 1) is true. However, it is possible for some people to start working on your specific topics in your first year, but this is relatively rare. We cover this in-depth in our staffing section in our second post.
Re 2): I believe that the lack of time to inform oneself about other career options is definitely one reason why consultants donât leave earlier. This is something we are trying to solve with the EACN.
Thanks for the thorough reply, and Iâve now read the second post which suggested more potential for direct impact than I had initially thought. On (2), I agree value drift wasnât a great term for what I had in mind. Thanks for bringing out the nuance there
Hi jchen1, thanks for this detailed comment!
Note: I reference our second & third posts a lot, which will be published in a few days!
Gain some of the transferrable skills could take a 1-2 years, although 1 year seems on the low end to me. As you progress in your consulting career you will get different kinds of responsibiities (e.g. directly interfacing with senior clients). We talk a little more abou this on our next posts.
This 80% rule woudnât apply the connections you make. As you progress in your consulting career youâre going to make more connections, and often more important connections (e.g. to senior-level partners and clients). We talk about this in our third post
We think the industry experience you gain is more valuable (we cover getting stafffed on relevant projects in our second post), but it take longer to get (in most cases >2 years to be staffed on specific topics).
We cover some considerations about if/âwhen to leave consulting in our third post and â% of transferrable skills acquiredâ is one part of the considerations for leaving.
We donât have exact numbers. Most of the consultants we interviewed were still in consulting, but we expect our sample was biased because people in the EACN are more likely to be consultants. The decision to pursue one strategy over another is very dependent on how you want to have an impactâwhat cause areas you want to contribute to, and what career path you aspire to follow.
We did not explicity ask this, and I think it would be hard to gauge without doing a much more in-depth survey.
I would say that âvalue driftâ implies that your values change, I think âlifestyle driftâ might be more accurate (see this post for more) RE: salary /â promotion. There are other reasons as well, such as status quo bias, risk aversion, or being too distracted to think about your values (see Habibaâs quote above). I wouldnât consder these âvalue driftâ per se. Ancedotally, 1 ex-consultant said they wished theyâd left earlier, though I wouldnât consider them having value drifted since they were incredibly engaged in EA before they joined consulting, and are now working at EA-aligned organisations.
The above reasons would be true for jobs in tech, finance etc. and arenât unique to consulting.
This is covered in our second post.
In most cases we think 1) is true. However, it is possible for some people to start working on your specific topics in your first year, but this is relatively rare. We cover this in-depth in our staffing section in our second post.
Re 2): I believe that the lack of time to inform oneself about other career options is definitely one reason why consultants donât leave earlier. This is something we are trying to solve with the EACN.
Small update: the sequence is complete so all the posts referenced above are available now!
Thanks for the thorough reply, and Iâve now read the second post which suggested more potential for direct impact than I had initially thought. On (2), I agree value drift wasnât a great term for what I had in mind. Thanks for bringing out the nuance there