Role Purpose & Context
Role Summary
The Consultant, Internal Consulting, is here to take specific, tricky business problems and break them down, figure out solutions, and then help get those solutions off the ground. You'll often own a particular workstream within a larger project, making sure that piece of the puzzle gets sorted properly. This means you'll spend your days digging into data, talking to people across the business, and then pulling together recommendations that actually make sense and can be put into practice.
Your work directly impacts how efficiently we run and how well we serve our customers. When you do this well, our internal teams feel less frustrated, processes run smoother, and we save money or make more of it. If it's not done right, we end up with half-baked ideas, wasted time, and the same old problems cropping up again. The real challenge here is making sense of messy situations and getting people to agree on a path forward, especially when you don't have direct authority over them. But the reward? Seeing your recommendations actually change how the company works for the better. That's pretty satisfying, honestly.
Reporting Structure
- Reports to: Senior Consultant, Internal Consulting
- Direct reports:
- Matrix relationships:
Junior Business Analyst (Internal), Project Associate (Internal), Process Improvement Specialist,
Key Stakeholders
Internal:
- Project Sponsors (Heads of Department)
- Operations Managers
- Sales Directors
- Product Owners
- Finance Business Partners
- IT Support Teams
External:
- Occasional vendor representatives (for specific tool evaluations)
- Industry experts (for research purposes)
Organisational Impact
Scope: You'll directly improve specific business processes and operational efficiency. Your work helps teams get unstuck, reduces waste, and makes sure projects move forward. You're essentially a catalyst for positive change in discrete areas of the business.
Performance Metrics
Quantitative Metrics
- Metric: Workstream On-Time Delivery
- Desc: Percentage of your assigned project workstreams completed by the agreed-upon deadline.
- Target: 95%+ on-time
- Freq: Per project, reviewed weekly with Senior Consultant
- Example: You're responsible for the 'As-Is Process Mapping' workstream. If it's due on Friday and you deliver it Thursday, that's a win. If it's late, that impacts the whole project.
- Metric: Data Analysis Accuracy
- Desc: Error rate in data models, calculations, and visualisations you produce.
- Target: Less than 2% error rate (e.g., 1 error per 50 data points)
- Freq: Per deliverable, reviewed by Senior Consultant
- Example: Your Excel model for cost savings has a formula error that overstates savings by £50K. That's a big miss. We're looking for you to catch these before they get to us.
- Metric: Stakeholder Engagement Score (Informal)
- Desc: Feedback from internal clients on your professionalism, preparedness, and ability to understand their needs during interviews and workshops.
- Target: Average score of 4 out of 5 from project stakeholders
- Freq: Post-project, via informal feedback from Senior Consultant
- Example: The Head of Operations tells your Senior Consultant, 'Your consultant really got what we were trying to achieve and asked smart questions.' That's what we're after.
- Metric: Documentation Quality
- Desc: Clarity, completeness, and usability of project documentation, such as process maps, meeting notes, and requirements documents.
- Target: All documentation meets internal standards, easily understood by others
- Freq: Per deliverable, reviewed by Senior Consultant
- Example: Someone new can pick up your 'To-Be Process' document and understand exactly what needs to happen without needing to ask you a dozen questions. That's good documentation.
Qualitative Metrics
- Metric: Problem Structuring Ability
- Desc: How well you take a vague problem and break it down into manageable, logical pieces with clear questions to answer.
- Evidence: You present a clear 'problem statement' and 'hypothesis' early in a workstream. Your analysis plan is logical and covers the key areas. You don't get stuck in 'boiling the ocean'.
- Metric: Recommendation Practicality
- Desc: The extent to which your proposed solutions are realistic, implementable, and address the root cause of the problem, not just the symptoms.
- Evidence: Your recommendations consider existing constraints (budget, resources, technology). You've thought through the 'how' of implementation, not just the 'what'. Stakeholders feel your ideas are achievable.
- Metric: Proactive Issue Identification
- Desc: Your ability to spot potential roadblocks, data gaps, or stakeholder resistance early on and raise them with your Senior Consultant.
- Evidence: You bring up a potential issue with data quality before it derails your analysis. You flag a brewing political tension between departments. You don't wait for problems to become crises.
- Metric: Adaptability to Feedback
- Desc: How effectively you incorporate feedback from your Senior Consultant and project stakeholders into your work, without getting defensive.
- Evidence: You revise a slide deck based on feedback quickly and effectively. You can explain how you've addressed comments. You see feedback as an opportunity to improve, not a criticism.
Primary Traits
- Trait: Influential (without authority)
- Manifestation: You're someone who can walk into a room, listen intently, and then present an idea that people actually consider, even if you're not their boss. You build trust quickly, whether you're chatting with a frontline team member or presenting to a department head. You can 'read the room' and know when to push an idea and when to hold back, adapting your message on the fly.
- Benefit: Here's the thing: you don't have direct authority over anyone in the business units you're trying to help. Your entire success hinges on your ability to convince a skeptical manager to try a new process or a busy team to adopt a different way of working. If you can't get people on board, even with solid data, your brilliant solutions will just sit on a shelf.
- Trait: Structurally Ambiguous
- Manifestation: Someone hands you a vague problem, like 'our customer onboarding is a bit of a mess,' and you don't freeze up. Instead, you start asking smart questions, sketching out initial ideas, and can independently begin to structure a project plan. You're energised by a blank whiteboard and the challenge of bringing clarity to chaos, rather than being paralysed by it.
- Benefit: Our team tackles the problems that are too complex or cross-functional for individual departments to solve easily. If a problem were simple and clear-cut, it would've been fixed already. Your job is to take those messy, undefined challenges and turn them into structured projects with clear steps and measurable outcomes. If you need a perfectly defined brief every time, you'll struggle here.
- Trait: Resilient
- Manifestation: You hear 'we've already tried that' or 'that will never work here' and, instead of giving up, you see it as a puzzle to solve or a challenge to overcome. You can bounce back quickly after a tough meeting where your ideas got pushed back. You don't take resistance to a project personally; you understand it's part of the change process.
- Benefit: Let's be real: change is hard, and people naturally resist it. You'll face political roadblocks, passive aggression, and legitimate concerns. You need to maintain your objectivity and momentum even when others are actively trying to stall or push back. If you take every setback to heart, this role will wear you down quickly.
Supporting Traits
- Trait: Intensely Curious
- Desc: You genuinely want to understand the 'why' behind everything. Why does that process work that way? Why do people use that workaround? You're not satisfied with surface-level answers.
- Trait: Diplomatic & Tactful
- Desc: You can deliver difficult feedback or challenge someone's long-held assumptions without alienating them. You know how to communicate sensitive information professionally.
- Trait: Articulate
- Desc: You can explain a complex analysis or a new process to a non-technical executive in three clear, concise sentences. You can write clearly and persuasively.
- Trait: Results-Oriented
- Desc: You've got a low tolerance for 'analysis paralysis.' You're always focused on driving towards a tangible outcome and making sure your work actually leads to a solution, not just more questions.
Primary Motivators
- Motivator: Solving Complex Puzzles
- Daily: You're at your best when faced with a messy problem that no one else has figured out. You enjoy the process of dissecting it, finding the root cause, and building a solution.
- Motivator: Driving Tangible Impact
- Daily: You want to see your work actually make a difference. You're not content with just writing reports; you want to see your recommendations implemented and improving things.
- Motivator: Continuous Learning & Growth
- Daily: You thrive in an environment where every project brings a new challenge, a new department to learn about, and new skills to pick up. You enjoy being stretched.
Potential Demotivators
Honestly, this role isn't for everyone. You'll often be responsible for a project's success without having direct authority over the people who need to do the work. You'll spend a fair bit of time trying to find, clean, and validate data from various legacy systems, which can feel like a scavenger hunt. Sometimes, your brilliant recommendations might get 'de-prioritised' by the business unit a month after approval, meaning your work sits on a shelf. If you need to see every single piece of your work make it to full production, you'll probably struggle here.
Common Frustrations
- Being told the data is 'readily available' only to spend 40% of your time trying to find, clean, and validate it from five different systems.
- Navigating unspoken political tensions between departments where your 'objective' recommendation inevitably favours one side, causing friction.
- The 'implementation dip' – your project is approved, but the business unit 'de-prioritises' the actual implementation work later, leaving your recommendations unused.
- The 'swoop and poop' – an executive who hasn't been involved suddenly appears in a late-stage meeting, offers a strong opinion, and derails weeks of work.
What Role Doesn't Offer
- A predictable, routine day-to-day where you know exactly what you'll be doing next week.
- Direct managerial authority over a team to execute your recommendations.
- A guarantee that every single project you work on will be fully implemented and achieve its original business case.
- The ability to avoid messy data or complex stakeholder dynamics.
ADHD Positives
- The constant variety of projects and problem-solving challenges can be highly engaging and stimulating, preventing boredom.
- The need to quickly dive deep into new topics and connect disparate ideas can be a strength for rapid learning and pattern recognition.
- The fast-paced nature of some project phases might align well with bursts of intense focus and productivity.
ADHD Challenges and Accommodations
- Maintaining focus on detailed documentation or repetitive data cleaning tasks can be challenging; using tools for automation or breaking tasks into smaller chunks helps.
- Managing multiple workstreams and shifting priorities requires strong organisational systems and clear communication from your Senior Consultant.
- We can offer flexible work arrangements, noise-cancelling headphones, and tools to help with task management and focus.
Dyslexia Positives
- Strong verbal communication and presentation skills are highly valued, especially when explaining complex ideas simply.
- Excellent spatial reasoning and ability to see the 'big picture' can be a huge asset in process mapping and understanding system interactions.
- Problem-solving often relies on visual thinking and conceptual understanding, which can be strengths.
Dyslexia Challenges and Accommodations
- Strong verbal communication and presentation skills are highly valued, especially when explaining complex ideas simply.
- Excellent spatial reasoning and ability to see the 'big picture' can be a huge asset in process mapping and understanding system interactions.
- Problem-solving often relies on visual thinking and conceptual understanding, which can be strengths.
Autism Positives
- A deep focus on logic, data, and objective analysis aligns perfectly with the core of internal consulting.
- The ability to identify patterns, inconsistencies, and details that others might miss is invaluable for problem diagnosis.
- A preference for clear, direct communication (when reciprocated) can streamline interactions and reduce ambiguity.
Autism Challenges and Accommodations
- Navigating complex social dynamics, unspoken political currents, and ambiguous stakeholder expectations can be demanding; explicit guidance and debriefs from your Senior Consultant are crucial.
- Unexpected changes to project scope or stakeholder demands can be unsettling; clear communication about changes and their rationale helps.
- We can provide clear meeting agendas, allow for pre-submission of questions, offer quiet workspaces, and ensure direct, unambiguous feedback.
Sensory Considerations
Our office environment is typically a modern, open-plan space, which means moderate background noise and visual activity. However, we have quiet zones and individual focus pods available. Most of your time will be spent collaborating in meeting rooms (virtual and physical) or at your desk. Social interactions are frequent but often structured around project work.
Flexibility Notes
We offer hybrid working, usually 2-3 days in the office, with flexibility depending on project needs. We're open to discussing specific arrangements to help you thrive.
Key Responsibilities
Experience Levels Responsibilities
- Level: Consultant (Level 002)
- Responsibilities: Take ownership of specific workstreams within a larger project, making sure your piece of the puzzle is delivered accurately and on time.
- Conduct detailed stakeholder interviews and workshops to gather requirements, understand 'as-is' processes, and identify pain points (you'll usually run these sessions yourself, but your Senior Consultant will help you prepare).
- Analyse complex data sets using Excel, Power BI, or SQL to uncover insights and quantify the impact of problems or proposed solutions.
- Develop 'to-be' process maps and initial solution designs, working with business teams to make sure they're practical and achievable.
- Prepare clear, concise presentations and reports for project updates and recommendations, often presenting your workstream's findings to a wider audience.
- Identify potential risks, issues, and dependencies within your workstream and flag them early to your Senior Consultant.
- Keep all project documentation up-to-date and organised—yes, it's boring, but future you (and the rest of the team) will be grateful.
- Supervision: You'll have weekly check-ins with your Senior Consultant to discuss progress, roadblocks, and next steps. For routine tasks, you'll work independently, but for anything novel or complex, you'll escalate and get guidance.
- Decision: You'll make routine decisions within your assigned workstream, like how to best structure your analysis or which stakeholders to interview next. Any decisions impacting project scope, budget, or timeline need to be discussed and approved by your Senior Consultant. You'll recommend solutions, but the final sign-off for implementation usually sits with the business unit or project sponsor.
- Success: Your success here means reliably delivering your assigned workstreams on time and with high quality. It means your analysis is accurate, your recommendations are practical, and stakeholders feel heard and understood. Essentially, you're the engine that keeps your part of the project moving forward effectively.
Decision-Making Authority
- Type: Project Scope Changes
- Entry: Escalate immediately to Senior Consultant for review and approval.
- Mid: Propose changes to Senior Consultant with impact assessment; Senior Consultant approves/escalates.
- Senior: Assess impact, recommend to Project Manager/Director for approval.
- Type: Methodology or Tool Selection (within workstream)
- Entry: Follow established guidelines; consult Senior Consultant for deviations.
- Mid: Choose approach for routine problems; consult Senior Consultant for novel situations.
- Senior: Make technical decisions within workstream; consult Director on strategic implications.
- Type: Stakeholder Communication (sensitive topics)
- Entry: Draft communication for Senior Consultant review/approval before sending.
- Mid: Draft and send routine communications; consult Senior Consultant for sensitive topics.
- Senior: Manage all workstream communications; inform Director on key updates.
- Type: Budget Allocation (for specific workstream activities, e.g., software trials)
- Entry: No authority; request approval from Senior Consultant for any spend.
- Mid: Recommend spend up to £1,000 for workstream-specific tools/resources; requires Senior Consultant approval.
- Senior: Approve spend up to £5K for workstream resources; consult Director for larger amounts.
ID:
Tool: Automated Interview Synthesis
Benefit: Use AI transcription tools (like Fireflies.ai or Otter.ai) to process your stakeholder interviews. The AI can then identify key themes, pain points, and direct quotes, giving you an instant summary. This means less time manually reviewing notes and more time understanding what people actually said.
ID:
Tool: First-Pass Data Exploration
Benefit: Got a raw data export from an ERP? Feed it into AI data analysis tools (like ChatGPT's Advanced Data Analysis). It can perform initial exploratory analysis, flag outliers, suggest visualisations, and even generate starter Python/SQL code for you. It's like having a junior analyst do the tedious first pass in minutes.
ID:
Tool: Accelerated Best-Practice Research
Benefit: Need to quickly understand industry benchmarks or best practices for a specific problem? Use AI search engines (e.g., Perplexity) or LLMs. They can condense hours of traditional Google searching into minutes, giving you a summary of relevant case studies and approaches without the endless scrolling.
ID: ✉️
Tool: Draft Communications & Reports
Benefit: Overcome 'blank page' syndrome. Use LLMs to create the first draft of routine project communications, like weekly status updates, SteerCo pre-reads, or even the narrative outline for a final PowerPoint presentation. Just give it your bullet points, and it'll spin up a coherent draft for you to refine.
Roughly 8-12 hours per week, depending on the project.
Weekly time savings potential
Most of these tools cost £20-£50 per month, and we'll cover that for you.
Typical tool investment
Competency Requirements
Foundation Skills (Transferable)
Beyond the technical stuff, a good Consultant needs a solid set of 'human' skills. These are the things that help you navigate complex situations, work with different personalities, and actually get your ideas across.
- Category: Communication & Influence
- Skills: Active Listening: Genuinely hearing and understanding stakeholder concerns, not just waiting to speak.
- Clear Written Communication: Crafting concise emails, reports, and presentations that get straight to the point.
- Verbal Presentation: Explaining complex ideas simply and persuasively to diverse audiences.
- Building Rapport: Quickly establishing trust and credibility with new people and teams.
- Category: Problem Solving & Critical Thinking
- Skills: Structured Thinking: Breaking down large, ambiguous problems into smaller, manageable pieces.
- Root Cause Analysis: Going beyond symptoms to identify the fundamental reasons behind issues.
- Quantitative Analysis: Interpreting numbers, identifying trends, and drawing data-backed conclusions.
- Hypothesis Testing: Forming educated guesses and designing analysis to prove or disprove them.
- Category: Collaboration & Adaptability
- Skills: Teamwork: Working effectively with your project team, sharing knowledge and supporting colleagues.
- Cross-functional Collaboration: Partnering with different departments, understanding their perspectives and needs.
- Flexibility: Adjusting your approach and plans when new information or priorities emerge.
- Feedback Incorporation: Actively seeking and constructively applying feedback to improve your work.
Functional Skills (Role-Specific Technical)
This is where we get into the bread and butter of internal consulting – the specific methods and tools you'll use every day to diagnose problems and design solutions.
Technical Competencies
- Skill: Business Case Development
- Desc: Quantifying the financial and operational impact of a proposed initiative, including basic ROI and payback period analysis. You'll build a compelling narrative for why a solution is worth the investment.
- Level: Intermediate
- Skill: Stakeholder Analysis & Management
- Desc: Identifying key people involved in a project, understanding their interests and influence, and developing a plan to keep them engaged and on board. This means knowing who to talk to, when, and about what.
- Level: Intermediate
- Skill: Process Mapping & Re-engineering (BPMN)
- Desc: Documenting how things work today ('as-is' processes) to spot inefficiencies, and then designing better ways of working ('to-be' processes) that save time, reduce errors, and make the most of our tools.
- Level: Intermediate
- Skill: Hypothesis-Driven Problem Solving
- Desc: Taking a vague problem, forming an initial educated guess about the solution, and then figuring out what data and analysis you need to prove or disprove that guess. It's about being efficient with your problem-solving.
- Level: Intermediate
- Skill: Workshop Facilitation
- Desc: Designing and leading interactive sessions with groups of colleagues to gather information, brainstorm ideas, map processes, or get everyone on the same page about a solution. You'll typically lead smaller, focused sessions.
- Level: Intermediate
Digital Tools
- Tool: Microsoft Excel
- Level: Advanced
- Usage: Building robust data models, performing complex calculations (VLOOKUP/XLOOKUP, SUMIFS), creating pivot tables for quick analysis, and cleaning messy data sets.
- Tool: Power BI / Tableau
- Level: Intermediate
- Usage: Connecting to cleaned data sources, building and modifying existing dashboards, creating clear visualisations to tell a data story, and sharing reports with stakeholders.
- Tool: Microsoft PowerPoint
- Level: Advanced
- Usage: Creating clear, well-structured slides from a brief, using templates effectively, and building compelling narratives for project updates and recommendations.
- Tool: Miro / Lucidchart
- Level: Intermediate
- Usage: Creating 'as-is' process maps based on interviews, facilitating simple brainstorming sessions, and visually documenting ideas and workflows.
- Tool: Asana / Monday.com
- Level: Advanced
- Usage: Building and managing your own project plans, tracking tasks and dependencies, updating project statuses, and configuring dashboards to show progress.
- Tool: SQL (PostgreSQL/MS SQL)
- Level: Basic
- Usage: Running pre-written queries to extract data, performing simple SELECT statements with WHERE and JOIN clauses, and understanding basic database structures.
Industry Knowledge
- Area: Business Operations Fundamentals
- Desc: Understanding common business functions like Sales, Marketing, Finance, and Operations, and how they typically interact. This isn't about being an expert in one, but knowing enough to ask the right questions.
- Area: Project Lifecycle Basics
- Desc: Familiarity with the typical stages of a project from initiation to closure, including planning, execution, monitoring, and control. Knowing what needs to happen when.
Regulatory Compliance Regulations
- Reg: General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)
- Usage: Understanding the basic principles of GDPR when handling any personal data during analysis or process design. You'll know when to flag potential data privacy risks.
- Reg: Company Internal Policies (e.g., Data Security, IT Usage)
- Usage: Adhering to all internal company policies related to data handling, information security, and IT system usage in your daily work. You'll know where to find these policies if you're unsure.
Essential Prerequisites
- A proven track record (2-5 years) in a role that involved structured problem-solving, data analysis, or process improvement, either in a consulting firm or an internal business analyst capacity.
- Demonstrable experience in building clear, data-driven presentations for various audiences.
- The ability to work independently on defined tasks, taking ownership and driving them to completion.
- Strong analytical skills, including advanced Excel proficiency and at least basic SQL knowledge.
- A genuine curiosity about how businesses work and a drive to make things better.
Career Pathway Context
These are the foundational skills we expect you to bring with you. We're not looking for you to be an expert in everything from day one, but you should have a solid base that we can build upon. Think of it as having the tools in your belt; we'll teach you the more advanced carpentry.
Qualifications & Credentials
Emerging Foundation Skills
- Skill: Prompt Engineering & LLM Integration
- Why: Honestly, competitors are already using tools like ChatGPT and Claude to draft reports in 10 minutes that used to take 2 hours. Consultants who figure this out will outproduce their peers significantly. It's not a 'nice to have' anymore; it's becoming critical.
- Concepts: [{'concept_name': 'Context Windows & Token Limits', 'description': 'Understanding how much information an AI can process at once and how to manage it efficiently.'}, {'concept_name': 'Temperature Settings', 'description': 'Knowing when to make an AI creative (higher temperature) versus factual and precise (lower temperature).'}, {'concept_name': 'RAG Architectures', 'description': 'Using Retrieval Augmented Generation to connect LLMs to our own internal, proprietary data for more accurate and relevant outputs.'}, {'concept_name': 'Output Validation & Hallucination Detection', 'description': "Crucially, knowing when NOT to trust the AI's output and how to verify its claims."}, {'concept_name': 'Prompt Chaining', 'description': 'Breaking down complex tasks into a series of smaller, linked prompts to guide the AI through a multi-step analysis or report generation.'}]
- Prepare: This week: Set up a free account with ChatGPT or Claude and use it to draft every email summary or meeting agenda.
- This month: Experiment with using an LLM to summarise a long document or research a specific industry topic.
- Month 2: Try to get an LLM to help you draft a first-pass analysis plan for a new workstream.
- Month 3: Document how much time you're saving and share your best prompts with the team.
- QuickWin: Start using Claude or ChatGPT to draft email summaries, code comments, or even initial presentation outlines today—no approval needed, immediate benefit.
Advancing Technical Skills
- Skill: Advanced Data Storytelling
- Why: With more data and AI helping with the analysis, the real value shifts to how well you can translate complex numbers into a compelling story that drives action. It's about influence, not just information.
- Concepts: [{'concept_name': 'Narrative Arc', 'description': 'Structuring your data presentation like a story with a clear beginning, middle, and end, leading to a call to action.'}, {'concept_name': 'Visualisation Best Practices', 'description': 'Moving beyond basic charts to create impactful, easy-to-understand visualisations that highlight key insights.'}, {'concept_name': 'Audience Tailoring', 'description': 'Adapting your data story and level of detail for different audiences, from technical teams to executive leadership.'}, {'concept_name': 'Call to Action', 'description': 'Ensuring every data insight leads to a clear, actionable recommendation.'}]
- Prepare: This week: Pay close attention to how your Senior Consultant structures their presentations and narratives.
- This month: Take a free online course on data visualisation or storytelling (e.g., from Tableau or Coursera).
- Month 2: Actively seek feedback on the clarity and impact of your presentations.
- Month 3: Volunteer to present a complex data set to a non-technical audience and focus solely on the story.
- QuickWin: Before your next presentation, write down the single key message you want your audience to take away. Then, build your slides backwards from that message.
Future Skills Closing Note
The bottom line is, the more you can automate the routine and focus on the strategic, the more valuable you'll become. We'll support you with learning resources, but the drive to pick up these new skills needs to come from you.
Education Requirements
- Level: Minimum
- Req: A Bachelor's degree (or equivalent OFQUAL Level 5-6 qualification) in Business, Economics, Finance, Engineering, or a related analytical field.
- Alts: We're pragmatic. If you've got 4+ years of relevant, hands-on experience in a similar analytical or project-based role, especially within a medium-sized company, we'd definitely consider that as equivalent. Show us what you've done.
- Level: Preferred
- Req: A Master's degree (or equivalent OFQUAL Level 7 qualification) in a relevant field.
- Alts: While a Master's is nice, it's not a deal-breaker. Strong practical experience and a track record of delivering results often count for more.
Experience Requirements
You'll need roughly 2-5 years of experience in a role where you've actively solved business problems, analysed data, or improved processes. This could be in an internal business analyst role, a junior consultant position, or even a highly analytical role within a specific business function (like Finance or Operations). We're looking for someone who has owned specific workstreams, conducted stakeholder interviews, and built data-backed recommendations, not just someone who's supported others from the sidelines.
Preferred Certifications
- Cert: Lean Six Sigma Yellow Belt
- Prod: Various accredited providers
- Usage: Demonstrates a foundational understanding of process improvement methodologies, which is directly applicable to our work.
- Cert: PRINCE2 Foundation
- Prod: AXELOS
- Usage: Shows you understand structured project management principles, which helps you manage your workstreams effectively.
- Cert: Microsoft Certified: Power BI Data Analyst Associate
- Prod: Microsoft
- Usage: Validates your ability to build and maintain data visualisations, a key part of how we communicate insights.
Recommended Activities
- Actively seek out opportunities to lead small workshops or present your findings to larger groups within your current role.
- Take online courses in advanced Excel, SQL, or Power BI to deepen your analytical skills.
- Read books or articles on consulting methodologies, change management (like ADKAR), or hypothesis-driven problem solving.
- Find a mentor, either formally or informally, who can offer guidance on navigating complex stakeholder situations.
- Practice structuring ambiguous problems. Take a real-world business challenge and try to break it down into a logical analysis plan.
Career Progression Pathways
Entry Paths to This Role
- Path: Business Analyst (Internal)
- Time: 1-3 years
- Path: Junior Consultant (External Firm)
- Time: 1-2 years
- Path: Highly Analytical Role (e.g., Finance Analyst, Ops Specialist)
- Time: 2-4 years
Career Progression From This Role
- Pathway: Senior Consultant, Internal Consulting (Level 003)
- Time: 2-3 years in this role
Long Term Vision Potential Roles
- Title: Principal Consultant, Internal Consulting (Level 005)
- Time: 5-8 years from Consultant
- Title: Director, Business Transformation (Level 006)
- Time: 8-12 years from Consultant
- Title: Head of Operations / Chief of Staff
- Time: 10-15 years from Consultant
Sector Mobility
The skills you'll build here—structured problem-solving, data analysis, stakeholder influence, and change management—are highly transferable. You could easily move into external consulting, a strategy role in another industry, or a senior operational leadership position in a different company.
How Zavmo Delivers This Role's Development
DISCOVER Phase: Skills Gap Analysis
Zavmo maps your current competencies against all requirements in this job description through conversational assessment. We evaluate your foundation skills (communication, strategic thinking), functional skills (CRM expertise, negotiation), and readiness for career progression.
Output: Personalised skills gap heat map showing strengths and priorities, estimated time to competency, neurodiversity accommodations.
DISCUSS Phase: Personalised Learning Pathway
Based on your DISCOVER results, Zavmo creates a personalised learning plan prioritised by impact: foundation skills first, then functional skills. We adapt to your learning style, pace, and neurodiversity needs (ADHD, dyslexia, autism).
Output: Week-by-week schedule, each module linked to specific job responsibilities, checkpoints and milestones.
DELIVER Phase: Conversational Learning
Learn through conversation, not boring modules. Zavmo uses 10 conversation types (Socratic dialogue, role-play, coaching, case studies) to build competence. Practice difficult QBR presentations, negotiate tough renewals, and handle churn conversations in a safe AI environment before facing real clients.
Example: "For 'Stakeholder Mapping', Zavmo will guide you through analysing a complex enterprise account, identifying key decision-makers, and building an engagement strategy."
DEMONSTRATE Phase: Competency Assessment
Zavmo automatically builds your evidence portfolio as you learn. Every conversation, practice scenario, and application example is captured and mapped to NOS performance criteria. When ready, your portfolio supports OFQUAL qualification claims and demonstrates competence to employers.
Output: Competency matrix, evidence portfolio (downloadable), qualification readiness, career progression score.