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Parthenon - EY Consultant Interview Questions, Process, and Tips

Updated 24 Dec 2015

Top Parthenon - EY Consultant Interview Questions and Answers

  • Q1. A store in a chain of retail department stores was experiencing a drop in profitability. Diagnose the problem
  • Q2. There is a college in Malaysia and it has been witnessing a fall in the number of students enrolled every year.(Case Type-Profitability)
  • Q3. Number of roller coaster rides in the US in a year.(Case Type- Guesstimate)

6 Parthenon - EY Consultant Interview Experiences

17 questions found

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Consultant Interview Questions

user image Viren Pereira

posted on 24 Dec 2015

I applied via Walk-in

3 Interview Rounds

Interview Questions

Interview Preparation Tips

Round: HR Interview
Experience: 1. Prepared answers to the basic questions in particular why firm ABC
2. Demonstrated enthusiasm. Spent over 20 minutes after he had asked his basic questions discussing Parthenon’s plans in India. It was more of a conversation and helped build connect.
Tips: 1. Do your reading about the areas of work that the Firm does so that you can engage the interviewer in a conversation [Source: Website, alums etc]
2. Prepare your basic questions and do mock PI sessions
3. Believe that you will crack the interview when you enter. The mental confidence does wonders.

Round: Case Study Interview
Experience: Started off by understanding the context to the case. A handy tool I would use to ensure I asked all the relevant questions was:
1. Did I understand every word in the problem definition e.g.: Drop in profitability by how much, since when, is it drop in absolute terms or percentage terms, what is the profitability trends for competitors in the industry
2. 5 Ws: Who, Why, When, Where, What V: What products does the retail store offer KK: Ordinary department store. Offers everything from electronic goods to vegetables to packaged foods etc
Me: Is it experiencing a fall in profitability in all products or certain segments
Interviewer: All
Me: What is the profitability trend of other competitors
Interviewer: Profitability has been stable although our chain is well below the industry average
Me: I am not very familiar with this business. Could you explain to me what the value chain would be like?
Interviewer: Standard procurement model. There are well-established suppliers for each product category. The goods are procured, markup price is applied by each store manager and goods are sold to retail customers
Me: What has the trend of costs been for the company
Interviewer: Costs have been stable
Me: Okay, so the problem as I see it is that this particular store has been seeing a drop in profits (absolute terms) over the last two years. We need to establish what it is that is causing the fall in profitability and what we can do.
Interview:er Sure go ahead
Me: I’m going to take a minute to structure how I want to think about this problem
Interviewer: Sure, go ahead V: Profitability = (P-VC)*Q – FC
Me: Broke down each leg of the equation into variables that would affect them.
Interviewer: Great I like the structure. Proceed V: Here’s where I got stumped. For the next 5 mins I made the mistake of not following my structure and asking some general questions about cost. I learnt that cost was RM was 60% of COGS, 20% labor and 10% Fixed Cost allocation. After probing I found out that costs were stable and that was no further potential to reduce the costs further. Then I touched on price and found that they had not touched ‘list price’ for a long time. Based on my questions I also learnt that volumes were actually increasing. That’s when I hit a wall. I was thinking to myself. Costs are stable. Price is stable. Quantity is increasing. How the hell is profitability falling? All the while
Interviewer is stone faced.
Me: I think I am pushing myself into a corner. Do you think there is something I am missing. KK: I think your structure was fine. Implicitly I sensed he was telling me to get back to my structure and ask him questions.
Me: I started with Price and was about to ask the first question when he said
Interviewer: Do you know what the revenue trends are like. Just thought you may want to know what revenue is like before you proceed.
Me: Sure, Can you tell me what their revenue trends have been.
Interviewer: Revenue has been falling
Interviewer: Okay. Just before we proceed I want to know whether you understand the relationship between COGS and revenue.
Me: Sure. As you sell more your COGS should increase proportionately assuming no significant changes in goods supplied, labour etc Now we are saying revenue is decreasing despite increasing COGS (absolute terms). This could mean one of two things since revenue is: Revenue = P*Q Quantity sold is falling. But we already established that volumes have been increasing evenly across the board or That effective price at which I am selling to the customer (effective being net of discounts, mark downs etc) is actually lower than the list price
Interviewer: He smiles (The first in over 20 minutes and I know I am on the right track). Great. I just wanted to establish that you understood the relationship. I think it is the latter. Proceed.
Me: Okay. So we know that a substantial part of the problem is that store managers are actually selling the products much below the list price.
Interviewer: Exactly. Why do you think this is the case?
Me: At this point I clarified whether he wanted me to finish the unasked questions in my structure and he said, “No. I think we have isolated the problem”.
Me: Since this was effectively a new problem, I asked for a minute to articulate what the potential causes could be. This is critical whenever a new question emerges in your problem. Do not answer off the cuff or it will seem like you are shooting arrows in the dark.
Me: I see three potential reasons: 1. Incentives: Retail store managers incentives are aligned to sales and not profitability and therefore he is cutting prices to increase volume 2. Buyer behavior: Customers have become more price sensitive. [On hindsight that did not make sense as this would have affected all department stores in the area] 3. Competition: Has there been any change in the competitive landscape.
Interviewer: Good points. So the store manager’s incentives are aligned to individual store performance. However let us ignore the case of manipulation. As far as your third point is concerned. Yes. Wal-Mart has opened a store recently next to this particular retail store and the store manager is being forced to compete with Wal-Mart’s ....
Me: I smile and say “Everyday low prices” [Thank you Prof. Rajiv Banker. We did a case on Wal-Mart twice with Prof. Banker]
Interviewer: Smiles right back and says yes. Whenever you are looking at a decision see the influence of your 4 Cs. Customer, Channel, Cost and Competition.
Me: Would you like me to explore potential solutions.
Interviewer: No. That’s fine. Let’s proceed to the next part of the question.
Interviewer: A software product company approaches the store manager with customer relationship management software that will enable the store to run a promotions and loyalty program. The store manager wants to know whether he should make the investment.
Me: Clarificatory questions. 1. Over what time frame are we evaluating this decision – 1 year 2. Are we considering only the acquisition cost in the decision or do we have to include operating expenses and training costs etc – Only acquisition cost. Assume it to be a onetime flat fee.
Me: We need to do break-even analysis and see whether we are likely to generate additional sales over the next year that will cover the acquisition cost.
Me: BEV Sales (units) = Acquisition cost/P-VC
Me: We need to compare this number with our expected increase in sales over the next year on account of this investment and see whether there is consistency.
Tips: Interviewer likes standard frameworks/equations. Don’t water down your structure with variations like the Internal vs. External factors.

Skills:
College Name: Indian School Of Business (ISB)

Consultant Interview Questions

user image Abhinav Mital

posted on 24 Dec 2015

I applied via Walk-in

1 Interview Round

Interview Questions

  • Q1. Client is a dollar store owner and has experienced a drop in revenues over the past year. View Answers (1)

Interview Preparation Tips

Round: Case Study Interview
Experience: This seemed as a standard revenue based case. however, the interviewer was not very interested in identifying one root problem but a breadth of problems that could influence revenues and more importantly the parameters or “symptoms” one should look for. I started with the understanding of the problem – how much drop in revenues, understand dollar stores, location of client, trend in revenue drop (geography, or store type). After having a good understanding of the situation, I decided to take a 3 Cs approach to diagnose the situation. Some problems uncovered were as follows – 1. slowdown of the economy. Consumer purchase decreasing 2. increase in competition. (possibly because of higher import opportunities) 3. geographical impact of competition 4. changing purchase behaviour at stores 5. decrease in repeat customers I followed up the diagnoses with solutions for each problem. The interviewer wanted to assess my ability to think about a wide variety of issues rather than go into a detailed discussion about one particular topic. On retrospect, I think that for a strategy consulting firm like Parthenon, they are more interested in macro level analysis than micro level.
Tips: Parthenon is strategy consulting. They will ask cases which have similar flavor as you would see in my next case interview.

Skills: Case Analysis
College Name: Indian School Of Business (ISB)

Consultant Interview Questions

user image Aakansha Sethi

posted on 11 Dec 2015

I applied via Referral

1 Interview Round

Interview Questions

  • Q1. Number of roller coaster rides in the US in a year.(Case Type- Guesstimate) View Answers (1)
  • Q2. Determine if a PE firm should invest in a timeshare based travel company- they've been making some profits but have now stagnated Add Answer
  • Q3. Was given a slide deck and asked to identify the problem and present the case Add Answer

Interview Preparation Tips

Round: Case Study Interview
Experience: Case solving as well as PI, 4 rounds of interviews.
Since I had work-ex as a journalist- will you be able to work as a consultant- do you have the requisite skill set- I spoke about my strengths which were unique- was asked to give concrete examples.
Tips: Practice, Practice, Practice and do as many different types of cases as possible. I didn't have a very quantitative background, so did my math with all the steps but ensured it was correct- make sure you don't make calculation errors

Round: Case Study Interview
Tips: The case went pretty well. Takeaways- Structure is very important. By the end of case prep you should be drawing up your own frameworks. Victor Cheng's videos are a good place to start. Along with group case prep, doing cases individually is a good way to internalize the concepts. Core term concepts have to be very clear. Consult and get feedback from the interviewer at every stage while solving the case

Round: Case Study Interview
Experience: The company was a scientific instruments company- sales data and market share data had to be analyzed- the company was present in too many categories and hence wasn't being able to specialize. However they rated extremely high on service- this mean the sales force was very skilled but was spread thin due to the number of categories they were present in. For this round my key reccos: 1. Go through all the slides- each slide will have a key take away 2. A story will start forming in your head- this is where listening carefully in class and practicing cases kicks in. 3. Write the points on the board simultaneously- doing them on paper first and then writing on the white board wastes time. 4. Reference page numbers on the white board so when you're making the presentation you aren't fumbling through the pages to find the relevant numbers. 5. Practice presentation skills.
Round 4 Partner round:
This round was with a partner where they asked me why a journalist wanted to become a consultant and if I'd be able to cope with the long hours. I gave an honest answer for both- this is better than having standard interview answers. I had bullet points for 50 or so PI questions. Other takeaways from the year: 1. Identify what you want to achieve in this year- and make a plan to achieve it before you get here- because during the year there isn't much time. 2. I did not have conventional corporate work ex- and for someone with a similar profile- you will have to work extra hard at mastering the concepts. 3. There's nothing that can replace practice for the case prep- so do as many cases as possible. 4. Speaking to alums about their experiences is very helpful- seek all the help you can get. 5. Begin CV review by August.


Skills:
College Name: Indian School Of Business (ISB)

Consultant Interview Questions

user image Vikas Panjwani

posted on 11 Dec 2015

I applied via Referral

1 Interview Round

Interview Questions

Interview Preparation Tips

Round: Case Study Interview
Experience: Case Narration
I had no break between any of the three interviews. After back to back 2 rounds, I was handed a 25 slides deck with loads of numbers, charts and graphs and interviews of key management personnel of the company. The interviewer gave me exactly 30 minutes to:
- Read the case and make sense of the bigger picture
- Analyze the numbers, charts and graphs and identify the trends
- Identify the potential problems (what the company is doing wrong)
- Try and figure out possible reasons for each of these problems
- Lay out an approach if I were to do this assignment in real life
- Use the white board in order to make a presentation to him (he was acting as the CEO of the Client company)

While it is extremely difficult to reproduce the case facts and approach here, I will cover some Dos and Don’ts below
Tips: Some Do’s:
1. Skim the case in the first 2-3 minutes identifying the flow of the case and how data heavy it is.
2. Spend the next 10-12 minutes quickly going through the slides and jotting down takeaways from each slide. Typically, each slide won’t have more than 1 -2 key takeaways.
3. Spend the next 5 minutes linking everything together and putting a story together and identifying 3-4 top issues.
4. Strictly reserve the last 10 minutes to use the white board and jot down the key issues, supporting numbers and your approach if you were to solve this case in real life. Do not over-write, just keep it as a reference for the Partner.
5. There might be client management interviews in the slide deck – they serve as important guides in order to identify the issues.

Some Don’ts:
1. Do not miss (at least) glancing through any slide. Make sure you cover all slides. It’s embarrassing to not know what’s on a particular slide at all in case the partner refers to it during the discussion.
2. Do not treat it as a normal case interview conversation. This is a business presentation, and hence the softer aspects of presentation get noticed all the more

Skills:
College Name: Indian School Of Business (ISB)

Parthenon - EY interview questions for designations

 Associate Consultant

 (2)

Consultant Interview Questions

user image Vikas Panjwani

posted on 11 Dec 2015

I applied via Referral

1 Interview Round

Interview Questions

  • Q1. There is a college in Malaysia and it has been witnessing a fall in the number of students enrolled every year.(Case Type-Profitability) View Answers (1)

Interview Preparation Tips

Round: Case Study Interview
Experience: There were no PI questions. I was only told one thing before he laid out the case facts – ‘Vikas, let me warn you upfront, this is going to be a very complex case and nobody today in the interviews has been able to crack it.” I do not know whether that was indeed the case or it was just a psychological ploy to make the circumstances more challenging.
One important skill that is helpful in such cases is the ability to ‘Zoom in’ and ‘Zoom Out’ frequently. Such cases would require you to keep the bigger picture in mind and not get too bogged down at any time of the case. Remember the interviewer is looking for your skills and ability and not for the solution of the case
Tips: It was extremely important to be calm in this interview as I kept meeting dead ends. I think one of the qualities being tested here was how the candidate reacts in adverse circumstances. These are the cases where being structured helps immensely as there is a high possibility that you might not get to the right answer. My advice would be to keep practicing this skill as much as possible, until it becomes a habit and comes out naturally


Skills:
College Name: Indian School Of Business (ISB)

Consultant Interview Questions

user image Vikas Panjwani

posted on 11 Dec 2015

I applied via Referral

3 Interview Rounds

Interview Questions

  • Q1. Why do you want to switch from a finance role to consulting role. Add Answer
  • Q2. Don’t you think you are moving away from your core strengths (finance) and becoming a generalist? Add Answer
  • Q3. Why don’t you want to go back to KPMG at a senior position? View Answers (1)
  • Q4. What do we do at Parthenon? View Answers (1)
  • Q5. Estimate the number of printers in India (Case Type-Guesstimate) View Answers (1)

Interview Preparation Tips

Round: HR Interview
Experience: this round was a mix of PI questions as well as one Guesstimate. The interviewer was trying to gauge my motivation of applying to Parthenon and the reason of switching from a core finance profile to consulting role. There were a few counter questions to whatever I had to say about my motivation, essentially to determine whether or not they should be spending their time interviewing me.

Round: Case Study Interview
Experience: As we know, there is no right or wrong approach or answer such questions. I started by breaking down the problem on the basis of use of the product. I divided the printers into corporate uses, residential uses and other uses.
As for corporate uses, I further divided it into Tier I, Tier II and Tier III cities. For each of the cities, I used the following approach:

India’s total population >> Population in Tier I / II / III cities / >> Division of population into age brackets >> Estimation of working population basis the age classification >> Estimate number of working people per printer Summing up the 3 city types, this would give total printers for corporate use.
For residential uses, I used the income approach for households and used the number of households in India as the starting point. Number of households >> Classification on the basis of Rural and Urban households >> Classification on the basis of income of each household >> Assumed a hit % for households only above a certain income level in Urban cities
For other uses, I primarily had Schools and Colleges in mind and went about estimating this using the population as the starting point.
India’s total population >> Population in Rural and urban >> Division of population into age brackets >> Estimate school and college going population >> Estimate average number of students per School / College >> Estimate number of printers per School / College Add everything up. Ask yourself whether the number looks realistic – Give your opinion whether it’s a conservative estimate or an optimistic estimate. Summarize the case.
Tips: Be very confident during PI. That is one thing which is completely in your control. The more you think about it and practice, the better you will get at it. PI is the only way for the recruiter to know you as a person, the rationale about your choices in life and whether you can stand your ground when pushed a bit. A good PI is more than half the job done (for that round).

The case was not a very tough one and since we had already spent considerable time on PI, the interviewer told me to go real quick about the case. There is no right or wrong answer to guesstimates, but there are certain things that you must follow in order to seem structured. A few do’s for guesstimates:
1. Narrow down meaning of the “product” ask clarifying questions
2. Think of various uses of the product and break the problem down.
3. Walk the interviewer through at each step – He wants to know how you are approaching the problem!
4. Give your prima facie opinion whether the answer looks reasonable – it is absolutely ok to arrive at an answer which is way off its mark
5. If possible, tell the interviewer the single most assumption you made in your approach To sum up it, guesstimates are not as arbitrary as they might look. There is a method to the madness

Skills:
College Name: Indian School Of Business (ISB)

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Consultant Interview Questions

Deloitte user image Anonymous

posted on 4 Jan 2025

Interview experience
5
Excellent
Difficulty level
Moderate
Duration
6-8 weeks
Result
Selected Selected

I applied via Approached by Company and was interviewed before Jan 2024.

4 Interview Rounds

1

Technical Round (2 Questions)

  • Q1. Questions regarding the tech for the role.
  • Q2. Basics to advance SQL and ETL
2

Technical Round (1 Question)

  • Q1. More detailed technical questions.
3

Behavioral Round (1 Question)

  • Q1. Behavioural and somewhat technical.
4

HR Round (1 Question)

  • Q1. Salary related discussions

Interview Preparation Tips

Interview preparation tips for other job seekers - Be confident, be bold and have great understanding about the role and the technical skills used for the same.

Consultant Interview Questions

Ernst & Young user image Venakata Prasad Pinapathruni

posted on 13 Nov 2024

Interview experience
4
Good
Difficulty level
-
Duration
-
Result
-

3 Interview Rounds

1

Technical Round (2 Questions)

  • Q1. Basic c# and web api
  • Q2. Angular questions
2

Technical Round (2 Questions)

  • Q1. Program in C# and advanced questions
  • Q2. SQL query writing
3

HR Round (2 Questions)

  • Q1. Introduction and project details
  • Q2. Salary and notice period discussion
Interview experience
5
Excellent
Difficulty level
-
Duration
-
Result
-

3 Interview Rounds

1

Aptitude Test Round

DILR questions very easy

2

Technical Round (2 Questions)

  • Q1. Guesstimates market sizing
  • Q2. Tell me about yourself
3

Case Study Round

Case study on market entry

Consultant Interview Questions

Protiviti user image Anonymous

posted on 13 Aug 2024

Interview experience
4
Good
Difficulty level
-
Duration
-
Result
-

1 Interview Round

1

One-on-one Round (2 Questions)

  • Q1. Explain about P2P process
  • Q2. Explain about your experiences

Interview Preparation Tips

Interview preparation tips for other job seekers - Learn about the internal audit process

Parthenon - EY Interview FAQs

What are the top questions asked in Parthenon - EY Consultant interview?

Some of the top questions asked at the Parthenon - EY Consultant interview -

  1. A store in a chain of retail department stores was experiencing a drop in profi...read more
  2. There is a college in Malaysia and it has been witnessing a fall in the number ...read more
  3. Number of roller coaster rides in the US in a year.(Case Type- Guesstima...read more

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