Tips for
Breaking Into and Succeed In Management Consulting
by Jennie S. Bev, contributing columnist

Management consulting is one of the professions that endure in a slow
economy. Why? Because more than ever, companies need consultants to help
them increase revenues and cut costs.
Management consulting is also known as one of the highest paid professions
in the United States. A recent survey by the Association of Management
Consulting Firms found entry-level consultants earn an average of $58,000
annually while senior partners earn an average of $259,000 (including
bonuses and profit sharing). Self-employed consultants may earn $100 to
$350 per hour.
Therefore, if you’ve been contemplating to break into this field, wait no
more. The financial reward would be a real incentive. Also, there are
other perks that would further motivate. They include: intellectual
challenge, opportunity to learn, helping others to learn,
self-satisfaction and prestige.
Now let’s talk about the two paths of management consulting to consider:
working for others and going solo. If you don’t have much experience or
are a new graduate, working for others is probably the wisest choice. If
you have already gained sufficient verifiable professional experience in a
specialized field, going solo is a highly feasible option.
Whichever path you’d choose, here are some tips to break into and succeed
this field:
1. Do your homework, get ready for the job. Equip yourself with the
required (and recommended) skills: problem-solving, communication,
management, computer and some foreign language.
2. Contrary to popular belief, you don’t need to have a business degree,
an MBA or even ANY degree to break into this field. Thus, if you do have
it, you are ahead in the game. However, you definitely need to have
specific personal attributes to succeed. Among them are leadership and
working well under stress.
3. Educate yourself continuously as knowledge evolves consistently and
there are new ways of solving the old and new problems.
4. Know what to expect from the job. Familiarize yourself with the job
titles, what their job descriptions are, the typical consulting job cycle
and (even better) how the sample proposals are planned and written for the
clients.
5. If your career goal is to work for a consulting firm, familiarize
yourself with the professional consulting job hunt process and interviews.
For instance, the interview stage for a consulting position includes
personality and resume questions, communication questions and business
case questions.
6. For those who are considering to going solo, you’ll need to assess your
working style and aptitude for entrepreneurship suitability, planning for
success, advertising and publicity, pricing your services and writing the
consulting agreement.
7. While it is not an absolute necessity and not many clients require it,
you may want to pursue a professional designation to take the consulting
career to the next level!
Last but not least, management consulting is a very lucrative field and
recession-proof. In fact, some specialized consulting fields are
experiencing a whopping increase of revenue. Now get ready to plunge into
this exciting and highly rewarding profession. Just make sure to do your
homework properly to ensure success.
Authors’ Bio: Jennie S. Bev is a San Francisco Bay Area
cost-reduction consultant, instructional designer and the author of Guide to
Become a Management Consultant published by FabJob.com, Inc (July 2002
release). Download the content from
http://www.fabjob.com/managementconsultant.asp?affiliate=236.
FabJob.com, Inc. is named #1 to get published online by
Writer’s Digest (January 2002). She can be contacted at via
CostReductionConsulting.net. She is also the Managing Editor of
BookReviewClub.com.