Is Consulting dying?
At least this post here sounds like it.
At least this post here sounds like it.
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Complete crock of shit - the guy is obviously trying to justify his own boutique.
Jesus, what is with all these "Is X dying" threads? The reason for investment banking, management consulting, etc. are pretty long term and structural - these aren't things that change overnight just because we have a mortgage/credit crisis.
Future of Healthcare/biotech Consulting (Originally Posted: 05/24/2012)
Many of the big pharmaceutical companies are laying off workers and outsourcing to other countries. The healthcare reform we are currently seeing in the U.S. is going to allow the government to have a larger effect on the pharmaceutical industry and change the healthcare scene overall. Those of you who have relevant experience, how do you think that this will affect the healthcare/biotech consulting field? What do you think will be the next hot areas in the field?
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Future of consulting? (Originally Posted: 01/12/2011)
What does everybody think the future of consulting will be? The industry barely existed 30+ years ago and has changed rapidly since. Are some models working better than others?
Admittedly, I am not an expert on the field, but I wouldn't be surprised if you saw firms becoming more and more specialized. Just like the first firms broke into fragments, I think as the industry progresses, you will see more firms follow that route and lead to more firms being reduced to niche type consulting.
Just my, fairly uninformed, 2 cents.
(I felt compelled to respond due to the posters name. Clearly my fan club is alive and well.)
I agree with that article but the problem won't play itself out over months or years but rather a decade or two.
The main problem for MC has been the open access to academic research into management techniques/frameworks.
Big pharma is investing into alot of biologics in their R&D pipeline. Life sciences in general might make a comback in the next few. I would imagine there will be increasing needs for clinical trial experts helping these start-ups charter through through the FDA regulatory process for said biologics. Capital is so dry for this space right now tho.
I think people will always need advice/help on making processes better. They had it in the days of Andrew Carnegie and Cheaper By The Dozen with efficiency specialists, they were just internal consultants but the name had not been invented yet.
Perhaps in fifty years, we will be asking what the future is for Actuary firms or Quant Analysis firms and note that the industry did not really exist 50 years ago (because those people worked for insurance companies and banks.)
There's definitely a such thing as too much consulting. Management's job, IMHO, is to keep the employees focused on the firm's best interests and otherwise let them do their job. And to that end, there's really only a finite amount of work that needs to be done every couple of years.
Firms hire strategy consultants to (1) give credibility to something they already know or (2) solve a problem they can not solve themselves.
So, as long as CEOs and boards face (1) office politics and (2) limitations of their own time, mind and experience, strategy consulting will survive.
Hence, I'd say we see a temporary decline in consulting fees as it's less accepted in the current climate to hire strategy consultants. I don't think top management has more time, brain power and know how than it did before the crisis.
Regarding special topic boutiques, they can only gain a competitive advantage by giving more credibility than MBB to something the client wants them to say (1), because it's hard for them to solve high level issues (2) if they don't have in-house experts on most/all areas of business that could come up in the solution.
More implementation and operational work to accompany strategy, closer partnership with middle management. Internally, there will be greater focus on centralizing data and leveraging already acquired knowledge and experience.
The industry's much more than 30 years old - McKinsey and AT Kearney have been around for over 80 years - but the number of players has certainly grown. There are a lot of specialized boutique firms led by former big firm partners popping up, but I don't see MBB and their ilk breaking up or specializing. But expansion into operational work, though unsavory, is probably inevitable, and i agree with petergibbons that firms will have to pay more attention to building on previous work instead of starting from scratch.
I actually meant to ask what everyone thought about the futre of strategy consulting. McKinsey and AT Kearny have been around for over 80 years (when it started, McKinsey was focused on "finance and budgeting services"), but McKinsey's strategy work didn't start until the 70s. Where does everything think this is headed?
For as long as people need specialized knowledge, consulting will always be here. Forever ... mwahaha! At least am hoping so ... for my own sake lol
I don't think the future of Strategy consulting is in any jeopardy. It will slowly return as we get further removed from the downturn. I do think that in the new stable market, strategy growth will pale in comparison to execution and project management growth. Maybe less so in MBB, but firms across the board are going to have to get their hands dirtier than before.
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