Case Samples McKinsey
Case Samples McKinsey
Case Samples McKinsey
Below are several examples of the kinds of cases we use in interviews. (You are
not likely to come across these in real interviews, but if you do, you should tell
your interviewer.) The first two cases are designed to help you walk through the
issues raised in each problem and get a sense of how you should be thinking
about a problem; the third and fourth cases are ones that you should work
through on your own before consulting the model answers. Reasonable answers
to the cases are included in italics.
¶ Competition and Profitability: How profitable could the players in the market
be? What profit do the current direct sellers make versus what the companies
selling through brokers make? How competitive is the market; are there many
players already? Are there companies already selling direct that have a “head
start,” such as a well known brand or many policies, which allows them to have
lower costs?
¶ Capabilities: How good could this particular insurance company be at this
business? What would they have to be good at to do well in this business? Do
they have these skills? Could they get them? At what cost?
¶ Impact on Existing Business: Will selling direct to customers adversely affect
the business sold through brokers, and does this matter? Would brokers stop
selling the insurance company’s policies if they knew that the company was
also bypassing them and selling direct to car owners?
At this stage, an interviewer could follow up on any of the points raised in more
detail. For example, he or she could ask:
¶ How would you figure out how big the market for direct selling may be
in 5 years‟ time? Say at the moment that 20 percent of car owners buy
their insurance over the phone directly from an insurance company.
How could you figure out what percentage this could be in 5 years‟
time?
¶ What do you think an insurance company selling direct to car owners
over the phone has to be good at?
CASE II: SUPERMARKET LAYOUT
We were asked by a supermarket chain in the U.K. to design a new, more
profitable type of supermarket for them. One of the key components of this
work was to design the layout to decide where all the different types of goods
should be located within the store. The supermarkets within the chain already
had very different layouts. For example, some stores had the fruit and
vegetables section near the entrance while some had placed this section near the
exit, so that customers would probably buy fruit and vegetables last.
The people within the client company thought that goods placed “first-in-flow”
(i.e., the goods that were the first items customers saw and bought) sold more.
They thought that moving a section from last-in-flow to first-in-flow would
increase its sales. How could you verify that this was true?
You could experiment with a supermarket. Change the location of a section and measure
its sales. But, this will take time to do and will probably upset customers. Have any of
the stores in the chain changed their layout recently? Are there records of the sales of
each section before and after? Obviously, you would have to take account of other
changes that were happening at the same time as the layout change, such as price changes
or changes in the amount of space given to each section.
You could take advantage of the fact that the chain already has different layouts among
its stores. Could you see whether sales of goods are higher when they are first in flow
than when they are elsewhere? This may get complicated, since different stores may have
different selling patterns due to other reasons (e.g., competition nearby, regional
preferences of consumers, and amount of space given to the goods).
Let‟s say that you did manage to prove it. You know that whatever you put first
is likely to sell more than it would in another place. What types of goods would
you think about putting first? Think of as many as you can.
How about:
¶ Goods we think will show the greatest rise in sales if moved to the front.
¶ Goods with the highest profit margin (i.e., if we make a 50 percent profit
margin on our meat, but only a 5 percent profit on our cereals, we would make
more profit if we put the meat first in flow).
¶ Goods that consumers don’t have to buy. For example, they probably buy
roughly the same amount of milk each week, and it would be hard for us to
persuade them to buy more. On the other hand, if we put cakes or alcohol first,
they may buy more than they normally would.
¶ Goods that we had a lot of and which may go bad soon (i.e., special offers).
(Note: there are many more suggestions.)
When we surveyed customers, they said that they preferred to have fruit and
vegetables last in flow so that the goods wouldn‟t get squashed at the bottom of
their grocery carts.
However, we ended up recommending that fruit and vegetables should be put
first. This wasn‟t because of any of the reasons that you have already outlined.
Why do you think it may have a benefit?
Was it because there was an overall effect on the store? Maybe people think the store
offers fresh, cheap, healthy items if people see fruit and vegetables first?
Was it for operational reasons for example, nearer to the loading dock for faster/cheaper
restocking of high turnover goods?
At this stage, the interviewer may follow up on other topics, for example:
¶ We found that some items in the store didn‟t make much money – for
example, the fresh fish counter. How would you decide whether this
counter should be kept?
¶ Do you think that the layout of each store in the chain should be the
same? Why or why not?
CASE III: BUILDING PRODUCTS
The CEO of a large building products company that produces and sells a wide
range of products for different customer segments has asked us to help him
examine the operations of his china products division. China products include
tubs, toilets, and urinals. Specifically, he wants to know if he should approve
$200 million expenditure for new manufacturing facilities.
¶ The company is one of seven producers in the U.S.; the largest
producer has a 20 percent share; our client is ranked #3 at 15 percent.
Prices for the client‟s products are flat.
The largest two competitors appear to earn a small return; our client
is break-even.
The largest competitor has just announced plans for a major modern
plant.
Minimum Answers:
¶ Market Size/Growth:
What has the industry growth been? What is it projected to be over the
next 10 or so years?
Is the growth linked to housing starts?
¶ Competitive Position:
How much overcapacity exists?
What are the competitors’ relative cost positions (i.e., are their costs to
produce the product relatively lower or higher than our client’s)?
¶ Market Segmentation:
How is the market broken down (e.g., residential versus industrial versus
commercial)?
Are different prices charged to different kinds of customers? Within
different markets?
Better Answers:
¶ Customer-buying Factor:
Do customers demand a supplier that can also supply them with other
building products?
¶ Barriers to Entry/Exit:
What is the minimum size of a new plant?
Generally, how expensive is entry/exit? Has there been a history of change
in the industry players?
¶ Manufacturing:
Do the plants produce other products/contribute to overhead?
Are there ways in which costs can be substantially lowered?
Outstanding Answers:
¶ Marketing:
Has the industry generally been charging prices that make sense given the
costs of production and the needs and sensitivities of various customer
segments?
Have competitors ever announced capacity expansions before and then not
implemented them?
Are there opportunities to change the product line to create a better fit with
customer segments and production constraints?
Does the new finish that will result from the investment “pay for itself”
with higher prices?
¶ Competitive Position:
How important is the product line to each competitor?
Are the products sold in combination (with each other, or with other
products such as fittings)?
Would exiting the business affect the sales, products, or costs of other
business units?
Are there advantages to plants being located in specific places due to high
transportation costs?
If the competitor’s new plant is built, will others drop out?
¶ External Environment:
Is regulation important?
Are there changing demographics that will affect demand?
CASE IV: DEMAND FOR CIGARETTES IN MOSCOW
The CEO of Philip Morris is about to enter a meeting with the company‟s Board
of Directors. We are riding up to the 30th floor in the elevator with him. As we
get in, the CEO turns to us, realizing that he has forgotten to include a key
analysis in his upcoming presentation to the Board – one that could help him
convince the Board to approve the building of a cigarette factory in Russia to
serve the Moscow market. He needs an estimate of the demand for cigarettes in
Moscow. We don‟t have any data with us, and we have five minutes before we
reach the 30th floor.
Question: What would you estimate the demand for cigarettes in Moscow to be?
CASE IV: SAMPLE ANSWERS
Poor Answer:
Candidate: What? That would be impossible to do without researching statistics.
Lack of curiosity or genuine interest in solving complex problems;
lack of comfort with ambiguity.
Interviewer: We’re not expected to give a precise answer. Do your best at coming up
with a back-of-the-envelope estimate.
Candidate: Well . . . I know they smoke more in Russia than in the U.S., and I heard
somewhere that Philip Morris makes more money in international markets than
domestically, so the market must be big . . .
Interviewer: Well, in fact someone else on the team knows that 75 percent of adult
Muscovites smoke.
Candidate: Okay, 75 percent is 75,000 people. And how many cigarettes do they smoke
a day?
Interviewer: Well, we’re going to have to wrap up. What else would you have liked to
have done with the analysis?
Candidate: I would have liked to have had access to an encyclopedia to be able to figure
out the real answer.
Good Answer:
Candidate: That’s an interesting question. Let’s see, how would I approach that if I
were really there? Well, first of all, we should define what we mean by the size of
demand. We could be measuring the number of cigarettes Muscovites smoke, the number
of cigarettes we think we can sell (assuming there are other brands in the market
competing with us), the money we can make selling cigarettes, or maybe the outlook into
the future, so the growth of cigarette consumption over the next few years. I guess the
best answer would include all of that. But let’s start with the number of cigarettes
Muscovites smoke.
Interviewer: Actually, somebody else on the team knows that 75 percent of adults smoke
in Russia.
Interviewer: Sure.
Candidate: So, now we need to know how much they smoke. Let’s say 1 pack a day on
average, or about 400 packs a year, times 5,500,000 people is 2,200,000,000 packs. If we
assume there are 20 cigarettes in a pack, that would be 4,400,000,000 cigarettes
consumed per year.
Candidate: Well, not knowing the market dynamics that lead to these different
situations around the world, I would say that the Russian market is probably pretty close
to Poland and Hungary. But let’s be conservative, and say that we feel confident that we
can achieve 60 percent share, which would be 22,000,000,000 plus 4,400,000,000 is
26,400,000,000 cigarettes a year or 1,320,000,000 packs per year.
Good logic; comfortable with ambiguity; facility with numbers
(again, the candidate chose to break down the multiplication).
Interviewer: That’s great. We’re running out of time. Anything else you would have
liked to have done with the analysis?
Candidate: I would have liked to have gotten a sense of how much demand will grow
over the next few years, which would be a function of population growth, growth of
smokers as a percent of the population, and the amount each smoker consumes. I also
would have liked to compare our estimate of demand for cigarettes in Moscow with
demand in a comparably-sized city like NY, just to make sure that it makes sense
intuitively. For example, I would definitely expect the size of demand in NY to be
smaller. But for now, I guess all we can tell the CEO is that he needs a factory which will
produce somewhere in the range of 1.3 billion packs of cigarettes a year.
Shows genuine interest and creativity; pushes analysis to the next
level; sums up analysis with concise recommendation to CEO.
Interviewer: Thank you.
A large trucking company (Truck Corp.) has asked for help with entering related
businesses.
¶ Since deregulation of the trucking industry in the early 1980s, the
industry has become extremely competitive, and the margins at Truck
Corp. have ranged from poor to fair over the last 10 years.
¶ Truck Corp. believes that the small package delivery business,
currently dominated by UPS and Federal Express, looks attractive.
Question: Should Truck Corp. enter the small package delivery business?
* * *