Leading management consulting firm McKinsey is placing greater emphasis on artificial intelligence skills in its hiring process, requiring some graduate applicants to work alongside an AI chatbot as part of their interviews.
The company's internal AI tool, Lilli, has been incorporated into a select few final-round interviews for business school graduates in the US, with candidates required to complete practical consulting tasks that are augmented by the technology. The goal is not for candidates to demonstrate technical expertise in AI, but rather to collaborate and reason using the chatbot as a support tool.
According to reports from CaseBasix, one of the companies helping candidates apply for McKinsey positions, the "AI interview" focuses on collaboration and reasoning skills rather than technical knowledge. Candidates are presented with business questions or scenarios and asked to use Lilli to explore information, structure their thinking, and refine their insights.
Applicants are not expected to be experts in prompting AI to carry out tasks, but rather demonstrate an ability to work alongside the technology as a "productive thinking partner." The assessment is believed to evaluate how candidates think, judge, and collaborate with AI tools rather than their technical knowledge.
The company's internal AI tool, Lilli, has been incorporated into a select few final-round interviews for business school graduates in the US, with candidates required to complete practical consulting tasks that are augmented by the technology. The goal is not for candidates to demonstrate technical expertise in AI, but rather to collaborate and reason using the chatbot as a support tool.
According to reports from CaseBasix, one of the companies helping candidates apply for McKinsey positions, the "AI interview" focuses on collaboration and reasoning skills rather than technical knowledge. Candidates are presented with business questions or scenarios and asked to use Lilli to explore information, structure their thinking, and refine their insights.
Applicants are not expected to be experts in prompting AI to carry out tasks, but rather demonstrate an ability to work alongside the technology as a "productive thinking partner." The assessment is believed to evaluate how candidates think, judge, and collaborate with AI tools rather than their technical knowledge.