1/ I've been teaching consulting skills to colleagues, students and business leaders for years. I love sharing these ideas.
People get excited by how quickly they can adopt these principles I learned while at McKinsey & BCG in their work strategyu.co
2/ I do have an online course with challenging assignments so you can practice these skills, but I delight in giving these ideas away so that people can piece it together without having to pay me anything.
If you have questions, just DM me and I'll help you.
3/ One fundamental shift is from solutions to problems. Seems simple, but isn’t. Most people jump to solutions.
Example: “We need to guarantee health insurance to all Americans”
Consultant: “Who said the problem we are solving is insurance coverage?”
10/ As you start to get answers you want to start formulating your "story" - for this we need to introduce you to the Pyramid Principle - popularized by Barbara Minto at McKinsey
11/ We should pause here to acknowledge that Barabara Minto is a badass - she was the first MBA Women consultant at McKinsey and more importantly helped create a system of thinking, writing & communication that enabled the consulting industry to take off
12/ In my telling of the pyramid principle, I look at it as two parts:
13/ The first part is about taking the A - the answers and synthesizing them.
Typically you use a "rule of three" to help guide your thinking. The dots represent the research you did and the answers you found - you want to make sure that the three areas are MECE
14/ The important thing here and is one of the most important ideas of the pyramid principle is that the insight is only composed of the information below it
15/ MECE was also invented by Barbaro Minto at McKinsey and pairs well with the pyramid principle.
Like a red wine and steak.
The principle is simple but hard to implement. It is more of an ideal than a hard and fast law.
This visual shows the principle in a simple way
16/ A quick example:
Apples Revenue:
- Americas Revenue
- Non-Americas Revenue
This is MECE because the categories do NOT overlap and collectively make up all of apples Revenue. This would NOT be MECE:
- Americas Revenue
- Europe Revenue
where is Asia?!
17/ Back to the pyramid principle. You'll likely start sorting the research you came up with and coming up with your high level story - you want to make sure that the three insights are MECE
18/ Then we get to telling the story.
The key thing about the pyramid principles is that you
=> Start with the answer
Or at McKinsey "communicate top down"
19/ Typically this is done in writing first. Often people don't create this space for thinking - there needs to be a gap or space between data gathering and writing your memo or powerpoint. This is why so many powerpoints suck.
Here is a rough framework:
20/ There are two ways to think about structuring your story. Directly or indirectly - both of which depend on the context of communication.
Hostile audience? Go Indirect
Friendly? Go Direct
21/ In PowerPoint you want to map your pyramid principle structure to slides.
22/ The next "hack" is to ensure you have horizontal and vertical flow with the slides.
Horizontal flow = there is a clear and consistent story
Vertical flow = titles tell the takeaway of the slide
Dive deeper here =>
23/ Here is the simplest example of vertical flow.
The reason is most people add WAY too much information and when people read slides they make a judgement in 3-5 seconds.
Can you figure out the takeaway in 5 seconds? If not you have work to do
24/ The best way to check for horizontal flow is to go into outline view and read the titles in the left pane or to copy and paste the titles into a word document.
Does it make sense? If not, you'll have a hard time making any sort of compelling argument:
25/ If you want to get wild with persuasion tips, formatting and the brain science behind mastering presentations - these 20 tips I published are a must read. strategyu.co/20-powerful-pr…
26/ These tips rely on iteration. The best way to get feedback is within a team that understands these principles and gives great feedback.
Great feedback is like improv - "yes, and"
Don't criticize fonts - give feedback on how to improve their thinking
27/ In consulting the iteration and continuous feedback is what makes some lose their minds and makes others love the work.
2/ MECE was invented by a bad-ass, Barbara Minto - probably one of the most influential people in the modern consulting industry. Her introduction of the Pyramid Principle and MECE principle quietly reshaped how firms solved problems, first at McKinsey and then at other firms
3/ Today consultants say "MECE", sounding like "mee-sea," however, Minto says its pronounce "meece" like Greece
Why should we listen to her?
“I invented it, so I get to say it how to pronounce it,” she says.