"Tell me about a time you had to explain a complex technical decision to non-technical stakeholders at BCG — for example, partners, consulting leadership, or product leaders working on BCG X or GAMMA solutions. What was the decision, how did you tailor the message to your audience, and what happened as a result?"
This question tests whether you can translate engineering complexity into business language without oversimplifying the real trade-offs. For an Engineering Manager at Boston Consulting Group, that often means aligning technical teams with senior stakeholders who care about client impact, delivery risk, timeline, cost, and reputation more than implementation details. Interviewers want to see whether you can create clarity, build trust, and drive a decision even when you do not have formal authority over every stakeholder in the room.
They are also looking for judgment: how you chose the right level of detail, handled disagreement or confusion, and ensured stakeholders understood the implications well enough to make a decision.
A strong answer uses a specific example with real stakes, shows how you adapted the message for different audiences, and explains the outcome in measurable terms. The best responses follow STAR, include a concrete communication mechanism, and end with what you learned about communicating technical decisions more effectively.