Metadata
Title
Business, consulting and management
Category
international
UUID
09bd42d34ee14bd19af24b992f16c166
Source URL
https://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/careers/career-options/sectors/business/
Parent URL
https://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/careers/career-options/sectors/
Crawl Time
2026-03-20T04:19:57+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Business, consulting and management

Source: https://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/careers/career-options/sectors/business/ Parent: https://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/careers/career-options/sectors/

This sector involves advising others on how to manage their businesses and projects. It is suited to those who can gather, combine and connect information quickly, and make practical proposals on the basis of that information.

Typical jobs in this sector include:

Key skills that are useful in this sector include:

For job profiles and detailed information on pursuing a career in this sector, see the Prospects website:

Business, consulting and management profile

Contents


How to get a job

To prepare for a career in business, consulting and management, you should research the sector carefully. You should also talk with people who are in the sector already.

Work experience is also an essential requirement for gaining employment in this sector. You can get this through internships and insight days.

Make a connection

Ideas to help you make contacts and connections:

See more ideas for making a connection.

Work experience

Before applying for an internship, consider getting experience to show the employer that you are committed to working in this sector:

Consider making a speculative application to smaller companies that may offer other types of work experience. The Management Consultancies Association (MCA) has a directory of consultancies to which you could apply.

Internships

Large graduate employers in this sector - including the ‘Big Four’ (Deloitte, KPMG, EY, PwC) - offer paid internship schemes (sometimes known as ‘vacation schemes’).

These internships usually last for two to eight weeks during the summer. They can be in any aspect of the employer’s business, and can sometimes lead to an offer of a graduate job at the end of your degree.

These internships can be highly competitive. Pay close attention to the application information provided on the company’s website and talk with those who have successfully applied to internships before. The Careers Centre also hosts events in which employers provide tips on making internship applications - see upcoming events.

You could also consider undertaking a shorter-term, unpaid virtual internship through Forage virtual internships. Some companies will fast-track an in-person internship application if you have already completed a Forage internship with them.

Find internships (Careers Centre)

Insight days

Larger employers often offer insight days and short work experience opportunities for first and second-year students. These usually last a couple of days and are unpaid. They help give you a sense of the company’s values, what work they do, and what it is like to work for them.

As well as gaining some work experience, these opportunities could provide you with useful contacts and possibly a formal placement.

Attend events

The Careers Centre often hosts events where you can talk to employers visiting St Andrews. Visit the events page for more information.


Finding a job

Check out our job listings for vacancies or see the resources below for jobs in the business, consulting and management sector.

Find jobs (Careers Centre)

Jobs in the UK

Graduate training schemes

A graduate training scheme is a paid, entry-level job that also acts as a training programme. Graduate training schemes are common in this sector and are one way of acquiring a graduate-level position. They are offered by a wide variety of large graduate employers, usually those that offer insight days and internships.

For further information on graduate training schemes in this sector, see Prospects’ consulting graduate schemes page.

Jobs outside the UK


Applying for a job

When applying for jobs in this sector, you can expect to do at least some of the following:

Assessment centres in this sector often ask you to participate in a mock consultation session, or ‘case study’, replicating the sort of challenges you could face when dealing with a real client. For more information on assessment centres in this sector, see TARGETjobs’ what happens at a consulting assessment centre.

If you would like personalised help on any aspect of applying for a job, you can book an appointment with a careers adviser.

Applying for a job