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Difference between revisions of "Management Consulting"

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*[[Project Management]]. Management consultants work directly with senior leadership and internal project teams to deliver hands-on project management and leadership consulting to include project implementation, execution and measurement.
 
*[[Project Management]]. Management consultants work directly with senior leadership and internal project teams to deliver hands-on project management and leadership consulting to include project implementation, execution and measurement.
  
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===The Problem-Solving Approach<ref> The Problem solving Approach in Management Consulting [https://www.caseinterview.com/management-consulting Caseinterview.com]</ref>===
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A big part of management consulting involves taking a strategic approach to problem-solving. By exploring all angles to a particular challenge, consultants are able to provide more useful and practicable solutions to their clients. Most consultants follow five main steps when approaching a business problem.
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[[File:problem solving approach.jpg|500px|Problem Solving Approach]]<br />
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source: Case Interview dot com
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*Defining the Problem: Anyone experienced in management consulting will tell you how important it is to clearly define a problem. The issues being faced needs to be identified specifically so that you can decide on the best approach to take. As a client explains the challenges they’re facing, they may present mixed information or a biased perception. Let’s use the example of a business that’s seeking to relocate. Your client may present the issue in a biased manner. They may mix separate issues or expect that their previous strategies will work in a new market. The role of a management consultant will be to filter information from the client so you can identify the specific challenges being faced. In this case, you may determine that gaining market share will be your client’s biggest challenge. With the scope of the problem clearly defined, you can begin framing your approach.
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*Deciding on the Approach to Take: Most consultants have specific approaches they take towards solving client problems. This is typically the second step in the problem-solving process. During this step, the management consultant will find out more about the problem being faced by their client. This may involve traveling to the client’s site to collect data, interview employees, and examine daily operations. With a deeper understanding of the client’s business and the problems they face, you’ll be in a better position to propose effective solutions.
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*Collecting and Analyzing Data: Management Consulting is known for its ability to implement data-driven solutions. What does this mean? Rather than providing general answers to problems being faced, consultants collect data, analyze it, and base their proposed solutions off this data. A data-driven approach is the best way of approaching a problem in an objective and effective manner. It’s also the best way to propose solutions that are easy for the client to understand.
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*Presenting Recommendations: A management consultant spends a lot of time working on deliverables. These deliverables are used to propose solutions to the client’s problem. Perhaps the most important step in management consulting is presenting recommendations in a manner that’s easy to understand. If your proposed solutions don’t make sense to your client, then they’re essentially useless. So,take the time to break down your recommendations into easily digestible portions. These solutions are tailored to the needs of the clients.
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*Follow Up: Were the Recommendations Successful? After proposing recommendations to your client, you need to determine whether your solutions are working. Management consutants develop specific criteria to measure the success of their recommendations. Success may be evaluated by tracking sales, calculating savings on operational costs, or counting new customer acquisitions.
  
  

Revision as of 21:48, 5 February 2021

Management Consulting is the practice of helping organizations to improve their performance, primarily through the analysis of existing organizational problems and development of plans for improvement. Organizations may draw upon the services of management consultants for a number of reasons, including gaining external advice and access to the consultants' specialised expertise. As a result of their exposure to and relationships with numerous organizations, consulting firms are also said to be aware of industry "best practices", although the transferability of such practices from one organization to another may be limited by the specific nature of situation under consideration. Consultancies may also provide organizational change management assistance, development of coaching skills, technology implementation, strategy development, or operational improvement services. Management consultants often bring their own proprietary methodologies or frameworks to guide the identification of problems, and to serve as the basis for recommendations for more effective or efficient ways of performing work tasks.[1]


Management Consulting Objectives[2]

Management consulting includes a broad range of activities, and the many firms and their members often define these practices quite differently. One way to categorize the activities is in terms of the professional’s area of expertise (such as competitive analysis, corporate strategy, operations management, or human resources). But in practice, as many differences exist within these categories as between them. Another approach is to view the process as a sequence of phases—entry, contracting, diagnosis, data collection, feedback, implementation, and so on. However, these phases are usually less discrete than most consultants admit.

Perhaps a more useful way of analyzing the process is to consider its purposes; clarity about goals certainly influences an engagement’s success. Here are consulting’s eight fundamental objectives, arranged hierarchically (see the figure below):


Hierarchy of Consulting Purposes
source: Harvard Business Reviw


1. Providing information to a client.
2. Solving a client’s problems.
3. Making a diagnosis, which may necessitate redefinition of the problem.
4. Making recommendations based on the diagnosis.
5. Assisting with implementation of recommended solutions.
6. Building a consensus and commitment around corrective action.
7. Facilitating client learning—that is, teaching clients how to resolve similar problems in the future.
8. Permanently improving organizational effectiveness.

The lower-numbered purposes are better understood and practiced and are also more requested by clients. Many consultants, however, aspire to a higher stage on the pyramid than most of their engagements achieve.

Purposes 1 through 5 are generally considered legitimate functions, though some controversy surrounds purpose 5. Management consultants are less likely to address purposes 6 through 8 explicitly, and their clients are not as likely to request them. But leading firms and their clients are beginning to approach lower-numbered purposes in ways that involve the other goals as well. Goals 6 through 8 are best considered by-products of earlier purposes, not additional objectives that become relevant only when the other purposes have been achieved. They are essential to effective consulting even if not recognized as explicit goals when the engagement begins.

Moving up the pyramid toward more ambitious purposes requires increasing sophistication and skill in the processes of consulting and in managing the consultant-client relationship. Sometimes a professional tries to shift the purpose of an engagement even though a shift is not called for; the firm may have lost track of the line between what’s best for the client and what’s best for the consultant’s business. But reputable consultants do not usually try to prolong engagements or enlarge their scope. Wherever on the pyramid the relationship starts, the outsider’s first job is to address the purpose the client requests. As the need arises, both parties may agree to move to other goals.


What Management Consultants Do[3]

The core work of a management consultant tends to fall within one or more of these three categories:

  • Functional Expertise and Specializations. Management consultants provide industry counsel, advice and functional expertise in specialized areas such as strategy, mergers, governance, reorganizations, organization design, strategic leadership, operations, finance, risk management, digital transformation, information technology, organizational change management, organization development, human resources, talent management, advertising, and marketing to name a few.
  • Objective Analyses and Assessments. A management consultant serves as an objective third party to conduct in-depth research and analysis and then provides an unbiased opinion and perspective on difficult matters and complex business problems and issues.
  • Project Management. Management consultants work directly with senior leadership and internal project teams to deliver hands-on project management and leadership consulting to include project implementation, execution and measurement.


The Problem-Solving Approach[4]

A big part of management consulting involves taking a strategic approach to problem-solving. By exploring all angles to a particular challenge, consultants are able to provide more useful and practicable solutions to their clients. Most consultants follow five main steps when approaching a business problem.


Problem Solving Approach
source: Case Interview dot com


  • Defining the Problem: Anyone experienced in management consulting will tell you how important it is to clearly define a problem. The issues being faced needs to be identified specifically so that you can decide on the best approach to take. As a client explains the challenges they’re facing, they may present mixed information or a biased perception. Let’s use the example of a business that’s seeking to relocate. Your client may present the issue in a biased manner. They may mix separate issues or expect that their previous strategies will work in a new market. The role of a management consultant will be to filter information from the client so you can identify the specific challenges being faced. In this case, you may determine that gaining market share will be your client’s biggest challenge. With the scope of the problem clearly defined, you can begin framing your approach.
  • Deciding on the Approach to Take: Most consultants have specific approaches they take towards solving client problems. This is typically the second step in the problem-solving process. During this step, the management consultant will find out more about the problem being faced by their client. This may involve traveling to the client’s site to collect data, interview employees, and examine daily operations. With a deeper understanding of the client’s business and the problems they face, you’ll be in a better position to propose effective solutions.
  • Collecting and Analyzing Data: Management Consulting is known for its ability to implement data-driven solutions. What does this mean? Rather than providing general answers to problems being faced, consultants collect data, analyze it, and base their proposed solutions off this data. A data-driven approach is the best way of approaching a problem in an objective and effective manner. It’s also the best way to propose solutions that are easy for the client to understand.
  • Presenting Recommendations: A management consultant spends a lot of time working on deliverables. These deliverables are used to propose solutions to the client’s problem. Perhaps the most important step in management consulting is presenting recommendations in a manner that’s easy to understand. If your proposed solutions don’t make sense to your client, then they’re essentially useless. So,take the time to break down your recommendations into easily digestible portions. These solutions are tailored to the needs of the clients.
  • Follow Up: Were the Recommendations Successful? After proposing recommendations to your client, you need to determine whether your solutions are working. Management consutants develop specific criteria to measure the success of their recommendations. Success may be evaluated by tracking sales, calculating savings on operational costs, or counting new customer acquisitions.


History of Management Consulting[5]

Management consulting grew with the rise of management, as a unique field of study. One of the first management consulting firms was Arthur D. Little Inc., founded in 1886 as a partnership, and later incorporated in 1909. Though Arthur D. Little later became a general management consultancy, it originally specialised in technical research.

As Arthur D. Little focused on technical research for the first few years, the first management consultancy was started by Frederick Winslow Taylor, who in 1893 opened an independent consulting practice in Philadelphia. His business card read "Consulting Engineer – Systematizing Shop Management and Manufacturing Costs a Specialty". By inventing Scientific Management, also known as Taylor's method, Frederick Winslow Taylor invented the first method of organizing work, spawning the careers of many more management consultants. One of Taylor's early collaborators, Morris Llewellyn Cooke, for example, opened his own management consultancy in 1905. Taylor's method was used worldwide until industry switched to a method invented by W. Edwards Deming.

The initial period of growth in the consulting industry was triggered by the Glass–Steagall Banking Act in the 1930s, and was driven by demand for advice on finance, strategy, and organization. From the 1950s onwards consultancies not only expanded their activities considerably in the United States but also opened offices in Europe and later in Asia and South America. After World War II, a number of new management consulting firms were formed, bringing a rigorous analytical approach to the study of management and strategy. The postwar years also saw the application of cybernetics principles to management through the work of Stafford Beer.

The industry experienced significant growth in the 1980s and 1990s, gaining considerable importance in relation to national gross domestic product. In 1980 there were only five consulting firms with more than 1,000 consultants worldwide, whereas by the 1990s there were more than thirty firms of this size.

A period of significant growth in the early 1980s was driven by demand for strategy and organization consultancies. The wave of growth in the 1990s was driven by both strategy and information technology advice. In the second half of the 1980s, the big accounting firms entered the IT consulting segment. The then Big Eight, now Big Four, accounting firms (PricewaterhouseCoopers; KPMG; Ernst & Young; Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu) had always offered advice in addition to their traditional services, but after the late 1980s these activities became increasingly important in relation to the maturing market of accounting and auditing. By the mid-1990s these firms had outgrown those service providers focusing on corporate strategy and organization. While three of the Big Four legally divided the different service lines after the Enron scandals and the ensuing breakdown of Arthur Andersen, they are now back in the consulting business. In 2000, Andersen Consulting broke off from Arthur Andersen and announced their new name: Accenture. The name change was effective starting January 1, 2001 and Accenture is currently the largest consulting firms in the world in employee headcount. They are publicly traded on the NYSE with ticker ACN.

The industry stagnated in 2001 before recovering after 2003 and then enjoying a period of sustained double-digit annual revenue growth until the financial crash of 2008/9. With Financial Services and Government being two of the largest spenders on consulting services, the financial crash and the resulting public sector austerity drives hit consulting revenues hard. In some markets such as the UK there was even a recession in the consulting industry, something which had never previously happened and has not happened since. There has been a gradual recovery in the consulting industry's growth rate in the intervening years, with a current trend towards a clearer segmentation of management consulting firms. In recent years, management consulting firms actively recruit top graduates from Ivy League universities, Rhodes Scholars, and students from top MBA programs.

In more recent times, traditional management consulting firms have had to face increasing challenges from disruptive online marketplaces that are aiming to cater to the increasing number of freelance management consulting professionals.


The Main Management Consulting Firms[6]

There are three companies which are often referred to as the Big Three consulting firms. They include McKinsey & Company, Boston Consulting Group and Bain & Company. They all consult on a variety of projects and specialisms.

The Big Four accountancy firms (PwC, EY, Deloitte and KPMG) also have large management consulting arms, plus there are other firms like CIL Management Consultants and Steer, which specialise in management consulting.

  1. Definition - What is Management Consulting? Definitions
  2. A Hierarchy of Purposes of Management Consulting hbr.org
  3. What do management consultants actually do? Forbes
  4. The Problem solving Approach in Management Consulting Caseinterview.com
  5. History of Management Consulting Wikipedia
  6. Who are the main management consulting firms? Bright Network