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The case interview is the ultimate “black box” of the hiring world. Whether you are aiming for McKinsey, BCG, or a high-stakes strategy role at a tech giant like Google or Meta, the challenge is the same: you aren’t being judged on your answer, but on the architecture of your thinking.
At Gogotechy, we’ve seen this from both sides of the table. I’m Pilar Alfonso Rico, and after interviewing over 300 candidates at Google, Meta, and TikTok, I can tell you that the difference between a “good” candidate and a “hired” candidate is structure.
In this guide, we’ll break down the exact frameworks and preparation steps used by top-tier consultants and tech leaders to turn ambiguity into a winning recommendation.
A case interview is a 30-to-45-minute business simulation. Your interviewer will present a complex, often underspecified business problem—falling profits for an airline, a market entry strategy for a SaaS company, or a “guesstimate” like “How many tennis balls fit in a Boeing 747?”
The goal isn’t to be a human calculator. Firms use these cases to evaluate:
Structured Thinking: Can you break a messy problem into MECE (Mutually Exclusive, Collectively Exhaustive) parts?
Quantitative Comfort: Can you handle “back-of-the-envelope” math under pressure?
Business Acumen: Do you understand the levers of profitability and growth?
Communication: Can you lead a client through a logical story?
Most candidates memorize “Porter’s Five Forces” and stop there. To stand out, you need frameworks that reflect how modern business actually works. Here are the three frameworks we teach at Gogotechy, adapted from ex-Google and ex-McKinsey standards.
This is the gold standard for strategy consultants. It’s best used when you need to pitch a transformative project or solve a high-level strategic gap.
Situation: Establish the “Current State.” What are the market conditions and KPIs today?
Complication: What is the “pain point”? Why is the status quo unsustainable? This is where you identify the “gap” in the data.
Resolution: Your proposed solution. Contrast your recommendation with the “do nothing” approach to show the value of action.
Use this when the case involves investment, product launches, or operational changes. It ensures you don’t miss the “boring but critical” details that senior stakeholders care about.
Problem Statement: Define the need.
Option Analysis: Compare 2–3 paths (including the “null hypothesis”).
Financial/Cost-Benefit Analysis: What is the payback period?
Risk Mitigation: What could go wrong, and how do we stop it?
In the tech world (Google, Meta, Startups), we don’t always have time for a 30-slide deck. This framework is for fast-moving environments.
Hypothesis: What do we believe is true?
MVP (Minimum Viable Product): What is the smallest version of this solution we can test?
Success Metrics: What specific KPIs will prove we are right?
The first five minutes are the most important.
Listen & Take Notes: Don’t just hear; transcribe the key numbers.
Rephrase the Question: “So, our goal is to identify why Profitability in the EMEA region dropped by 15% despite a 10% increase in volume. Is that correct?”
Ask Clarifying Questions: “Do we have a specific timeline for this turnaround?” or “Is there a specific profit margin target the client is aiming for?”
Don’t jump into the math yet. Ask for 30 seconds of silence to “structure your thoughts.” Draw your “Issue Tree.”
Tip: Avoid “canned” frameworks. If the case is about a retail store, your branches should be “Foot Traffic,” “Conversion Rate,” and “Average Basket Value,” not just “Revenue and Costs.”
You cannot use a calculator in most case interviews. You need to be comfortable with:
Percentages and Decimals: E.g., “What is 15% of $400M?”
Rounding: If the number is $9.87, use $10 for the initial logic and refine later.
Sanity Checks: If you calculate that a local coffee shop makes $10B a year, stop and say, “That seems too high; let me re-check my zeros.”
This is where most candidates fail. The interviewer cannot grade what they cannot hear.
Instead of: (Silence for 2 minutes)… “The answer is 4 million.”
Try: “I’m going to estimate the population of the city first, then assume a 20% penetration rate based on typical urban demographics…”
| Case Type | Key Objective | Winning Approach |
| Profitability | Identify why profit is down. | Use $Profit = (Price – VC) \times Volume – FC$. |
| Market Entry | Should we enter a new country/product? | Analyze Market Size, Competition, and “Ability to Win.” |
| M&A | Should Company A buy Company B? | Focus on Synergies (1+1=3) and Cultural Fit. |
| Guesstimates | Estimate a number with zero data. | Break it down into a logical “Demand-side” or “Supply-side” equation. |
Having sat on the other side of the table, here is the “insider” advice:
Don’t ignore the “Soft” skills: We are looking for “The Airport Test.” Would I want to be stuck in an airport for 5 hours with you? Be professional, but be human.
The “So What?” Factor: Never give a number without an insight. If you find out costs are up 20%, don’t just say it. Say: “Costs are up 20%, which suggests our supply chain efficiency has eroded. I’d like to explore our raw material vendors next.”
Synthesize at the end: Your final recommendation should be a “Bottom-Line Up Front” (BLUF) statement.
Recommendation.
Top 3 supporting reasons.
Risks and next steps.
The old way of preparing involved pestering friends for mock interviews. The new way is leveraging AI-driven career agents. At Gogotechy, our AI career coach is designed to simulate the pressure of a real interview. It can provide:
Instant Feedback: “Your framework was too broad; you missed the variable cost component.”
Unlimited Reps: Practice 50 cases in the time it takes to schedule one mock interview with a human.
Big Tech Logic: Our agents are trained on the specific methodologies used at Google, Meta, and top-tier consulting firms.
Case interview prep is not about being a genius; it’s about being disciplined. It’s about learning to love the process of breaking down a problem. Whether you use the SCR framework or a Lean MVP approach, the goal is to show the interviewer that you are a reliable, logical, and creative partner.
Ready to stop guessing and start practicing? At Gogotechy, we’ve built the all-in-one platform to help you break into tech and consulting. From AI-powered mock interviews to personalized career strategy, we provide the human-centric support I wish I’d had at the start of my career.
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