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Advice needed: specialising as a grad

 
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#0 Advice needed: specialising as a grad
 
Joanna
10.08.10 00:00
 
I am a 2.1 grad from a top 5 uni (not oxbridge) going into a niche strategy consultancy (not one of the top boutiques). TBH I am worried about specialising so early in my career, particularly because it is a specialism I blagged/fell into rather than something I chose actively and not at one of the well known boutiques. I am considering going back on the milkround, having strengthened my experience. I don't have any big name firms on my CV but have done quite a lot of "interesting stuff" in terms of work exp and outside activities (for my age). Think I need to find a mentor...So really, what are people's thoughts on specialising early on in your career? Have you found it to hinder you later on, or has it in fact improve your prospects?Additionally if anyone has advice... What would you suggest as good next moves from here? Back on the milkround/hold out and do MBA/potentially move to other specialist firm/industry?(At this stage it is strategy consultancy I am interested in, rather than IT/process management consultancy.)
 
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#0 RE: Advice needed: specialising as a grad
 
Cynic
10.08.10 00:00
 
A few things:1. People DO get pigeonholed. Whether you work for a full-service global consultancy or a nice boutique, your first few projects have an irritating tendancy to brand you for life.2. That's not necessarily a bad thing. Better to be an expert in a specific field these days than a generalist, in my opinion.3. From what you've described, it doesn't really sound like you'll be "specailising" anyway. I've yet to meet a "specialist strategy consultant". Almost all of them are generalists who will do anything as long as the daily rate is right and the client is prepared to hire them.
 
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#0 RE: RE: Advice needed: specialising as a grad
 
Joanna
10.08.10 00:00
 
Cynic, thanks for the input. The firm I am joining deals only with a specific industry... Although I am going to try and gain exposure to as many different sorts of project as I can (although I have also been hired to a specific team.)
 
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#0 RE: RE: RE: Advice needed: specialising as a grad
 
jj
10.08.10 00:00
 
Most in demand are specialists in the right specialism. In the wrong specialism there is no demand - hence the massive "skill shortages" whilst millions are unemployed.I am a generalist. This is not any easier as you are often trumped by a specialist.I think the answer is to be a specialist in a growing field, but not too specialist, and ensure you stay up to date - if necessary taking pay cuts for the right experience.
 
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#0 RE: Advice needed: specialising as a grad
 
Mars A Day
10.08.10 00:00
 
Joanna I'll be blunt with you, not least as that's what I do anyway.If you go this niche strategy but not top boutique route this early in your career I suggest the next step will be to familiarise yourself with all the literature at your local jobcentre.Don't worry about specialising this early in your career - technically as a raw grad you don't have one yet. Instead worry anout where this role will leave you in 2 years time. If, in 2 years time, you sent me your CV and told me you are a strategy consultant in a non top tier boutique, my first reaction with be 'Eh?' or words to that effect. Strat consultants are a hard sell, and expensive, at the best of times, and frankly unless you are very senior you wont be learning much of any use. Couple this with a non brand company and a 2.1 from a non oxbridge uni and I dont see you differentiating yourself.If you want to trundle along, maybe entertain some MBA notions later on, which you probably wont be able to afford because credit will be drier than Gandhi's flip flop and this boutique wont be able to offer you steady progression anyway, then entertain yourself with them. But reality it sooner or later - and I suggest sooner - you will realise, in a cold sweat and sense of dread, that you need a name on your CV. It really wont matter what type of consulting if the brand is big enough, because in strat consulting most will leave after a period of time and go to industry or - wonder of wonders - process consulting. Go back to the milkround and get on the merry-go-round while you have the chance.
 
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#0 RE: Advice needed: specialising as a grad
 
crafty bison
10.08.10 00:00
 
A niche strat consultancy that only deals with one industry... we're talking Credo, right?
 
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#0 RE: RE: RE: RE: Advice needed: specialising as a grad
 
Joanna
10.08.10 00:00
 
@jj makes a lot of sense... Just difficult to judge as a new entrant and I don't want to post any further unanonamysing information here@mars.. you describe (and confirm) my fears exactly, have taken the advice onboard (though you can appreciate I would not write what I posted above in that manner on my cv)@crafty no, credo remains still fairly generalist no? I understand they work mainly with b2b services but this would span many industries I would have thought?
 
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