Consultant's Mind

Great Advice from Students

Advice from Students. Shouldn’t we learn from those with more experience and great track records. Stand on the shoulder of giants. Use best practices. Learn the hacks. Work smart. I started asking students who crushed my class last year, what their advice was for the new-incoming group of students. Here are some verbatim comments related to exams, class participation, and teams.  Hint: this applies to all of us, not just students.

Exams (read: any assessments in life, GMAT, projects, presentations)

  • Be able to think broadly and really think about application of material. How does this actually play out?
  • Play devil’s advocate when eliminating choices
  • Actually explain it to someone, if they understood you, you understand the material
  • Start early. The brain needs time to develop the intuition for newly learned concepts
  • Don’t just memorize the concepts in the PowerPoints
  • Study in groups and quiz each other
  • Focus on the takeaways
  • As you learn concepts and principles, apply them to your daily WSJ readings and to other classes
  • Write your own test questions using the slides. . . distill essential information

Team Work (read: All project-based, cross-functional work in Fortune 500)

  • Put in the effort and do your part
  • Support each other, but also battle out the best ideas
  • Start early, and schedule meetings a few days in advance
  • Split up the work, but make sure everything is cohesive and has an overall message that makes sense
  • Don’t always be in a group with your friends because it’s harder to hold a friend accountable
  • Everyone should do a little of everything if you want your paper to be unique and not just good
  • When first meeting, lay out everyone’s strengths, weaknesses, and fear about team projects
  • Set expectations for work contributions and work styles early on
  • Focus on quantitative metrics and measures of success
  • Make sure to keep asking “Is this logical?” and “Do these facts connect and tie back to the main idea?”
  • Treat your projects like real-world assignments. Would you turn your work in on the job at an investment bank or consulting firm?
  • Be concise but thorough. Don’t be superfluous
  • Have one person proofread everything

Getting the most out of the experience (read: continuous learning)

  • Ask questions and try to apply to projects that are also outside of class
  • [Think] how I can offer a meaningful contribution that advances everyone’s learning?
  • Business classes can only provide you a logic framework
  • Go hard on the final project. It’s a lot of fun if you put your heart into it
  • Have fun with it
  • Tell yourself the content is interesting and it will become more interesting (heh, heh)
  • Use frameworks as tools to organize your thoughts and as a common language for strategy
  • Relate it to your internship, your job search, and day-to-day life

Learn how to learn

When I share this list (12pg total) I also provide a major caveat, that all advice is not good advice for you. In fact, some of the advice (re-read everything, memorize everything, watch all the videos again) is not what I would recommend. That said, we all learn differently. Find the way that makes sense for you.  N=1

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