The interviewer asks: 'Our client's profits dropped 20% last year. How would you figure out why?'
Your brain immediately floods with possibilities: Sales are down? Costs went up? Competition? Economy? Price cuts? You blurt out: 'Maybe they lost customers? Or their costs increased?'
The interviewer nods politely. 'Okay... how would you organize your thinking?'
Silence.
This was me in my first practice case. I had ideas, but no way to organize them. I jumped between revenue problems and cost problems randomly. I repeated myself. I missed obvious drivers. And worst of all, I couldn't explain my logic because I didn't have any.
Here's what nobody tells beginners: having random good ideas doesn't impress anyone. Consultants get hired because they can take messy, ambiguous problems and make them structured. That structure is what lets you solve problems systematically instead of guessing.
MECE—Mutually Exclusive, Collectively Exhaustive—is the foundation of that structure. It's not a framework to memorize. It's a thinking discipline that ensures you don't miss important pieces and don't waste time double-counting the same thing.
In the next 30 minutes, I'll show you what MECE actually means, how to test if your structure is MECE, and how to build MECE structures from scratch. This is the skill that makes everything else in case interviews possible.