STRAT 325 - Intro to Management Consulting
Syllabus
| Term | Winter 2026 |
| Instructor | Scott Murff |
| TAs/Coaches | Carson Fellows, Tatum Frazier, Ambrose Aggabao, EJ Smith, Grant Hill, Avery Pate, Grace Dyer, David Fillmore |
| Class Time | Tuesday/Thursday 12:30 – 1:45 PM |
| Location | W240 |
| Office Hours | By Appointment |
| LMS | LearningSuite |
Course Overview
Welcome to Intro to Management Consulting (STRAT 325). This course teaches you The Consultant’s OS, a professional operating system that drives success at top-tier consulting firms and beyond.
You’ll apply this OS to two course goals:
| Goal | Focus | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Land an Offer | Networking, resume, case interviews, behavioral stories | Secure or make progress towards a consulting internship |
| Do Client Work | Company analysis, competitive benchmarking, strategic proposals | Deliver real consulting work |
These goals reinforce each other. The same OS that helps you structure a case interview helps you deliver impactful client work. The same approach that builds your networking skills builds trust with stakeholders.
The Consultant Toolkit
By the end of this course, you will develop proficiency in eight core areas:
| Skill | What It Means |
|---|---|
| Structured Problem-Solving | Decompose ambiguous problems using MECE logic and hypothesis-driven thinking |
| Clear Communication | Apply the Pyramid Principle; write action-titled slides; deliver crisp verbal updates |
| Analytics & Modeling | Build models in Excel; synthesize data into insights; estimate with confidence |
| Workstream Ownership | Act with high agency; own work end-to-end; anticipate needs and drive outcomes without waiting to be told |
| Client Hands | Interact professionally with senior stakeholders; build trust through credibility |
| Teamwork | Collaborate across team structures; give and receive feedback effectively |
| Coachability | Incorporate feedback rapidly; demonstrate growth through iteration |
| Tolerance for Ambiguity | Navigate uncertainty; make progress without complete information |
AI at the Core
AI is not a separate topic. It’s how you’ll apply every skill in this course. From Week 2, you’ll learn to use AI tools (Claude Code, VS Code/Cursor/Antigravity) to accelerate your research, analysis, and communication. Every project expects AI-assisted work.
Learning Outcomes
| # | Learning Outcome | BYU Aims Supported |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Apply The Consultant’s OS to define and solve client problems using MECE logic, issue trees, and hypothesis-driven analysis | Intellectually Enlarging |
| 2 | Use AI-assisted tools (e.g., Claude Code, Gemini) to gather outside-in insights, build models, and test hypotheses with transparency and integrity | Lifelong Learning and Service; Character Building |
| 3 | Communicate clear, executive-level recommendations using the Pyramid Principle and visual slide design | Intellectually Enlarging; Character Building |
| 4 | Demonstrate Christlike professionalism through humility, judgment, and trustworthiness in team and client interactions | Spiritually Strengthening; Character Building |
| 5 | Prepare for consulting interviews and internships by articulating a clear value proposition through resumes, networking, and behavioral interviews | Lifelong Learning and Service; Spiritually Strengthening |
Schedule
Semester: January 7 – April 15, 2026 (15 weeks)
See the full schedule for weekly topics, reading quizzes, and assignment due dates.
Client Work Projects
Projects are progressive, and each builds on the last:
| Project | Due | Scope | Team | Deliverable |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1: Company Diagnostic | Week 8 | Quick outside-in analysis | Individual | 1-page analysis |
| 2: Competitive Benchmark | Week 10 | Industry comparison | Individual | 3 slides |
| 3: Value-Add Hypothesis | Week 12 | Opportunity identification | Pairs | 5 slides |
| Capstone | Week 13-14 | Deep-dive proposal + presentation | Teams of 3 | 15-20 slides |
You choose your target company. All projects expect AI-assisted research and analysis.
Grading
| Category | Weight | Components |
|---|---|---|
| Applied Projects | 50% | P1 (10%), P2 (10%), P3 (10%), Capstone (20%) |
| Interview Prep | 30% | Resume & Networking (10%), Practice Interview Log (20%) |
| Reading Quizzes | 10% | 10 quizzes × 5 points each |
| Participation | 10% | TA pod engagement, workshops, peer feedback |
Grading Scale
| Letter | Range | GPA |
|---|---|---|
| A | 93–100% | 4.0 |
| A- | 90–92% | 3.7 |
| B+ | 87–89% | 3.4 |
| B | 83–86% | 3.0 |
| B- | 80–82% | 2.7 |
| C+ | 77–79% | 2.4 |
| C | 73–76% | 2.0 |
| C- | 70–72% | 1.7 |
| D+ | 67–69% | 1.4 |
| D | 63–66% | 1.0 |
| D- | 60–62% | 0.7 |
| E | Below 60% | 0.0 |
Late Work Policy
Late work accepted up to 9 days late with a 10% penalty per day:
| Days Late | Penalty |
|---|---|
| 1-3 | -10% to -30% |
| 4-6 | -40% to -60% |
| 7-9 | -70% to -90% |
| 10+ | No credit |
Interview Prep Components
Practice Interviews
Practice interviews combine behavioral and case components, mirroring the actual MBB interview format. Complete 8 practice interviews throughout the semester:
| Source | Sessions | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Pod peers | 5 | Practice with each pod member once |
| TA | 3 | TA Mentoring Sessions (Weeks 5, 9-10, 14) |
| Total | 8 |
Each practice interview includes behavioral questions (~20 min) followed by a case (~35 min), with feedback afterward. Interviewers complete a feedback form after each session to track your growth across 6 dimensions.
Behavioral Stories
Build a bank of 5+ polished stories using the PARADE framework for common behavioral questions. You’ll practice delivering these stories live during your 8 practice interviews.
Networking Tracker
Maintain a tracking spreadsheet documenting outreach, smoothie chats, and relationship building. Your TA will review progress during TA Mentoring Sessions.
TA Pod Structure
You’ll be assigned to a pod of 6 students with a dedicated TA who mentors you all semester. Your pod serves as:
- Support system: People rooting for your success
- Practice interview partners: 5 peers to practice with
- Peer feedback: Resume reviews, story refinement, honest input
| TA Touchpoint | Timing |
|---|---|
| Goals Worksheet + Chat | Week 2 |
| TA Mentoring Session 1 | Weeks 4-5 |
| Resume reviews | Weeks 5-7 |
| TA Mentoring Session 2 | Weeks 9-10 |
| TA Mentoring Session 3 | Week 14 |
Your TA is your primary resource for feedback, coaching, and support. The same TA conducts all 3 mentoring sessions so they can track your growth over the semester.
Instructor Bio
Scott Murff is an Associate Teaching Professor of Strategy at the BYU Marriott School of Business, where he also serves as program director and teaches courses on management consulting, product management, and artificial intelligence. He brings over 15 years of experience at the intersection of business and technology, having worked as a consultant, product manager, and data scientist.
Prior to joining BYU, Scott spent nearly seven years at McKinsey & Company in roles ranging from analytics specialist consultant to principal product manager, where he led product development and performance management initiatives for Fortune 500 clients.
Scott holds a Master’s degree in Management Science & Engineering from Stanford University and a B.A. in Economics from BYU.
Required Materials
- LMS: LearningSuite (used for turning in assignments and viewing grades only. See this course website for schedule and all other information)
- Laptop: Mac or Windows with ability to run VS Code or Cursor
- AI Access: Paid or free versions of one or more of Claude Code, Gemini, Codex, Github Copilot CLI, Cursor, Antigravity
Recommended readings will be provided through the course website.
Classroom Culture
Laptop Policy
Laptops may be used for note-taking and class-related purposes. Avoid activities that would distract nearby students.
Cold Calling
I teach in a conversational style that includes cold calling. If you’d rather I not cold call on you, please let me know on the first day of class.
Office Hours and Help
- Start with AI tools and the course website
- Use email teams to ask classmates
- Attend TA or Professor office hours
- Contact your TA via email
- Contact Professor Murff via email
University Policies
Mission and Aims
The mission of Brigham Young University, founded, supported, and guided by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, is to assist individuals in their quest for perfection and eternal life.
BYU seeks to develop students of faith, intellect, and character who have the skills and the desire to continue learning and to serve others throughout their lives.
A BYU education should be (1) spiritually strengthening, (2) intellectually enlarging, and (3) character building, leading to (4) lifelong learning and service.
Marriott School Values
Building on the foundational Mission and Aims, the Marriott School of Business aspires to transform the world through Christlike leadership, guided by:
- Faith in Christ – Deep and abiding faith gives us capacity to envision a better future
- Integrity in Action – Acting with integrity builds trust and strengthens character
- Respect for All – Recognizing the inherent worth and divine potential of each person
- Excellence – Pursuing excellence in learning, teaching, and leadership