McKinsey Ecosystem Building: Strategy, Status, and What Replaced It

A cleaner guide to McKinsey Ecosystem Building covering how the older module worked, what it tested, whether it still appears, and what to study instead for current Solve.

McKinsey Ecosystem Building is best understood as an older Solve-style module, not the center of most current McKinsey prep. If you are seeing the term in old guides or candidate reports, the practical question is not "How do I memorize every species?" It is "What did this task test, and how much attention should I give it compared with the modules my invite actually names?"

What Ecosystem Building Was

Ecosystem Building was a Solve task where you worked from a species pool to build a viable food chain for a given habitat. The important thing was never memorizing species names. The important thing was building a logically connected system under time pressure.

Part of the taskWhat you were doingWhat it tested
Scenario orientationNarrow to the right habitat and species setAbility to filter noise quickly
Species selectionChoose a set that can support one anotherStructured problem decomposition
Chain buildingConnect predators, prey, and producersSystems thinking under constraints
RevisionFix broken links without restarting blindlyIteration quality

The reason this page still matters is that it shows the kind of reasoning McKinsey wanted from Solve even when the exact tasks evolved.

Is Ecosystem Building Still Part of Solve in 2026?

Treat this as a historical or edge-case guide unless your invitation suggests otherwise.

McKinsey's public Solve materials say the game is built from a task library, that tasks vary, and that candidates get tutorials at the start of each task. What McKinsey does not do publicly is publish a full module map for every current invitation. That means your invitation email and recruiter are more trustworthy than any forum thread.

The practical takeaway:

  • if your prep is for the common current Solve path, spend more time on the modules candidates report seeing now
  • if your invitation or office-specific process points you toward older or longer-form Solve variants, use this guide as context
  • if your materials only mention Solve generically, prioritize structured reasoning over module trivia

How the Game Worked

The exact interface could vary, but the process logic was consistent.

  1. Identify the relevant habitat or scenario. You should not spend most of your time reading irrelevant species cards.
  2. Work from the top of the chain downward. Starting with an apex predator or anchor species gives the rest of the chain structure.
  3. Check whether each link is actually viable. A pretty ecosystem that cannot sustain itself is still a bad answer.
  4. Make targeted edits instead of restarting. McKinsey's public Solve framing is about problem-solving behavior, so the way you repair mistakes matters.

What It Actually Tested

This is the real value of the page. Even if you never see Ecosystem Building, the task reveals what McKinsey cared about in Solve:

  • structured filtering — narrowing the search space quickly
  • systems thinking — understanding how one choice affects the whole chain
  • hypothesis-driven iteration — changing the weakest link instead of blowing up the whole answer
  • time management — staying useful under a fixed clock

That lines up with McKinsey's own explanation of Solve: they wanted tasks that reveal how people approach problems, not whether they memorized business content.

Common Mistakes Candidates Reported

Reading everything before deciding anything

Candidates often burned time exploring too many species before committing to an approach. The better move was to narrow early and build from there.

Building from the middle instead of the top

If you start with random species and hope a chain appears later, the page feels harder than it is. Working from an anchor species makes the structure clearer.

Forgetting the base of the chain

A food chain without a stable base is not a good answer. Many candidates over-focused on predators because they felt more important.

Restarting instead of making one clean fix

This is the biggest "AI slop" lesson too: more motion is not more quality. In Solve, the cleaner move is usually a targeted correction, not a full restart.

What to Study Instead for Current Solve

If your invite does not explicitly point you to Ecosystem Building, your time is usually better spent on the current Solve flow and the live interview process that comes after it.

The broader rule is simple: use module-specific prep only if it matches the process you are actually facing.

Sources (checked April 12, 2026)

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