McKinsey MECE Principle Presentation preview
Title Slide preview
Mece Method Slide preview
Mece Definition Slide preview
Mutually Exclusive Slide preview
Mece Vs. Non-Mece Slide preview
North American Cell Phone Market Slide preview
Collectively Exhaustive Definition Slide preview
Subproblem Slide preview
Two-Part Mece Framework Slide preview
Customer age brackets Slide preview
Mece Example: Customer Age Brackets Slide preview
Profitability Framework Slide preview
Steps Of Profitability Framework Slide preview
Hypothesis Is True If Slide preview
Company More Profitable Slide preview
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Synopsis

Can you make every idea count and have every problem efficiently solved? The answer is yes, you can; with one simple tool – MECE Principle from McKinsey & Co. Our McKinsey MECE Principle presentation allows you to apply this clean and intuitive framework to protect you and your team from misfires and duplication of work and solve any problem, anywhere, anytime.

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Questions and answers
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Yes, there are several ways to test the logic of a MECE (Mutually Exclusive, Collectively Exhaustive) breakdown.

Firstly, you can check for mutual exclusivity by ensuring that no two items or categories overlap. This means that each item should only fit into one category.

Secondly, you can test for collective exhaustiveness by making sure that all possible items or categories are included. This means that there should be no gaps in your breakdown.

Additionally, you can also validate your MECE breakdown by applying it to a real-world problem or scenario. If it helps you to organize information and solve the problem efficiently without any redundancies or gaps, then your MECE breakdown is logically sound.

Remember, the goal of a MECE breakdown is to provide a comprehensive and non-overlapping way to organize information.

The MECE Principle can be adapted for different types of problems by breaking down the problem into mutually exclusive and collectively exhaustive parts. This allows for a comprehensive and efficient problem-solving approach, avoiding duplication of work and ensuring all aspects of the problem are addressed.

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Slide highlights

First and foremost, use this slide to define the basics of your problem and list all of your Mutually Exclusive (ME) items, as well as all of your Collectively Exhaustive (CE) items. Then communicated these items to your team or stakeholders.

Mece Method

With slides, such as this one, you can create and share with your team a Profitability Tree. Profitability trees are a type of issue tree that is created with the sole intent to run a thorough analysis of the company profits.

Profitability Framework

Overview

MECE Principle was developed by Barbara Minto – the first female MBA professional hire at McKinsey & Co, best known for the Minto Pyramid Principle – framework for writing and presenting ideas. Business strategy consultants apply MECE problem structuring to break down client problems into logical buckets of analysis.

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Questions and answers
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The MECE Principle, developed by Barbara Minto, aligns with other business strategy tools by providing a framework for breaking down complex problems into manageable parts. This principle is often used in conjunction with other tools to analyze and solve business problems. It complements other tools by ensuring that all aspects of a problem are considered without overlap, thus promoting comprehensive and effective solutions.

To effectively use the MECE Principle, one needs to have strong analytical skills, logical thinking, and problem-solving abilities. It also requires the ability to break down complex problems into smaller, manageable parts. Good communication skills are also essential to present the findings in a clear and concise manner.

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The MECE Principle suggests that to solve any problem, you need to first understand your options by sorting them into two categories:

  • Mutually Exclusive (ME) – includes items that can only fit into one category at a time (in other words, there is no overlap between them).
  • Collectively Exhaustive (CE) – means all items can fit into one of the categories (there is an overlap between the two different areas of the framework).

If you're unsure how to pronounce MECE, McKinsey team pronounces it as "Mee-cee," but Barbara pronounces it with one syllable, rhyming with "Greece." "I invented it, so I get to say how to pronounce it," she says in a blog post for McKinsey & Co.

Mece Example: Customer Age Brackets

Application

According to IGotAnOffer Consulting, to make any framework MECE, you need to do the following:

Use a math formula

Using a math formula can work really well to break down a framework in a MECE way because math formulas are MECE by nature, the consultants say. For example, to calculate company profits, keep in mind that Profits = Revenue - Costs, where Revenue is Units sold and Price per unit and Costs is Fixed cost and Variable cost.

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Use a supply-chain / process

Structuring your framework using a supply-chain or a process also works well. Because each step in the process is separate, your framework will be mutually exclusive. For example, the supply chain of the Coca-Cola company may look like this:

  • Sourcing of raw ingredients
  • Manufacturing a product
  • Shipping to local markets
  • Mixing and bottling of Coke in local markets
  • Distribution to retail points (stores, wholesalers, etc.)

Use common lists

The last approach you can use to make your framework MECE is to rely on common lists of elements that are important in business. The following examples are again applied to Coca-Cola, where each bullet point could be a different framework:

  • Products: Coke, Diet Coke, Coke Zero
  • Countries: US, Europe, China, India
  • Business entities: Suppliers, Clients, Competitors, Regulator
  • Distribution channels: Retail stores (Walmart, Target), Restaurants (McDonald's, In-N-Out Burger), Wholesalers.
Two-Part Mece Framework
Collectively Exhaustive Definition

Hidden rules

MConsultingPrep experts list these four MECE Principle rules as hidden:

  1. Parallel items – the first "hidden rule" of MECE is that all items have to belong on the same logical level.
  2. Orderly list – this MECE Principle rule implies that items should be arranged in a logical fashion to extract the most benefits.
  3. The "Rule of Three" – the "Rule of Three" states that sets of three items are the most intuitive to the human brain as they make information easy to store and process. Plus, smaller sets of items are less time-consuming to describe. In a MECE framework, the number of items on each level should be around three (however, two and four are also allowed). But once you hit five, things start to get confusing for both you and your stakeholders.
  4. No interlinking items – for an issue tree to be truly MECE, the items on the same level must be interdependent. If there is interdependence between the items, one Root Cause Analysis will manifest in many different symptoms across the board, which will make it more difficult to locate the mentioned root cause. An example of this would be to break down revenue into the Unit Price and Sales Volume. While generally considered MECE, these two items are interlinked, so technically, they are not mutually exclusive.
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