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Posts from the ‘Firm Review’ Category

Inside a McKinsey Engagement on Finance

Market in Oxkutzkab Yucatan Mexico

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Emerging markets and micro-finance are hot topics at the moment. Whether it is micro-finance in Mexico, Brazil, India, Pakistan or Indonesia, the sector is definitely growing. All the major consulting firms from McKinsey, the Boston Consulting Group to Bain have tried to break into this sector. As expected, McKinsey has been heavily involved in micro-finance work and has undertaken some of the work significant and landmark projects. This posting is based on a series of discussions we have had with several McKinsey consultants working on a micro-finance project in Latin America. We follow them through an real engagement and see how they tackled the study. The McKinsey consultants interviewed spoke off the record and where not authorized to speak about the engagement. For the record, they did not divulge any confidential information. Read more

Ranking McKinsey, Bain, BCG, Monitor, Deloitte, Accenture: Monitor Company…should you steer clear?

Monitor Group

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You worked hard to get your MBA, graduate degree or undergraduate degree. It was not easy. You made sacrifices. Your family made sacrifices. You spent tens of thousands of dollars. You need to make sure the firm you join is as committed to your development as you are to succeeding. In today’s post, we will discuss Monitor Company. Monitor Company was a firm founded with great promise. No less a person than Michael Porter gave his blessing (but not his complete time and attention) to this firm as a founding partner. In the late 80’s and early 90’s Monitor was so full of promise. It was mentioned in the same breath as McKinsey, Bain and BCG. To say Monitor has fallen would be to mislead you. It never rose very far for it to fall much. Although, we can say it never lived up to its potential. Read more

Behind the Scenes on a BCG Engagement: Liberal arts major building her first economic model

Maria, not her real name, is a current consultant in a BCG Eastern European office. She has kindly agreed to share her experiences from the perspective of a non-quant. Maria holds a master’s degree in literature from her country’s most prestigious university and worked as an intern at a FMCG company before joining BCG as an analyst. Maria encourages readers to ask questions about BCG and not be afraid to enter consulting with an Arts degree.

Straight off, I want to say that I have never used a spreadsheet throughout my life. Read more

From Pepsi to Bain: My life as a management consulting star and partner

O Pepsi

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Terence (not his real name) was a consulting partner at 2 leading international management consulting firms. He has worked on engagements in the USA, UK, Brazil, Turkey, Russia, France, Mexico, South Africa, Dubai and Canada. He rose rapidly through the ranks and made partner in a very short time frame. He has graciously agreed to write a limited series of posts about his journey from Pepsi into management consulting and his life as a consultant. This is his story and first post.

In his first post, he discussed his move from Pepsi to Bain & Company. His second post discussed his early years at Bain & Company. His third post discussed his first client-facing engagement as an analyst at an airline client. His fourth post examined his role in developing the business case on an IT strategy project for an airline company. His fifth post examined turning around a struggling Eastern European airline in preparation for an IPO. His sixth post reviewed a project to create a new low-cost airline. His seventh post looked at Bain benchmarking techniques. His subsequent posts, approximately 15 additional chapters have been converted into a 287 book which completes the arc of his career started in these articles.

Money, or should I say, lack of money was one major reason to join management consulting. It was not the only reason. At 21 years of age, I was an assistant brand manager for Pepsi. The pay was not great as I had only been in the position for 1 year and I had no advanced degree. The work at Pepsi was interesting but not dynamic. Read more

How Gemini Consulting, the one-time McKinsey killer, shot itself in the foot

Statue in Cherbourg-Octeville unveiled by Napo...

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Today’s Insider’s Guide to Management Consulting Firms focuses on Gemini Consulting (now called Cap Gemini). When we say Gemini in the posting we are really referring to Cap Gemini’s management consulting arm. As in the earlier posts, we will focus on the behind the scenes issues, avoid the positive marketing spin and look at things from a partners perspective. Before giving you our findings on Gemini it is worth looking at the history of this firm to understand just how far it has fallen.

In the mid 1990’s Gemini Consulting was a darling of the industry. It was posting explosive revenue and margin growth, hiring the best and brightest from the Ivy Leagues, winning some of the largest management consulting engagements and producing some of the most jaw-dropping and exquisite strategic analyses. The merger of the MAC Group (Strategists) with United Research (Operations Specialists) gave Gemini a massive boost in the sector. Many believed that Gemini had what it took to displace McKinsey. Yet by 1999 Gemini had lost is fizzle and was a mere shadow of its self. By 2001 it was on a clear downward curve and today you would be hard pressed to find any proof that this once mighty firm existed. The ruins of Rome seem to have been preserved better.

The reasons why Gemini failed 10 years ago still afflict the Cap Gemini consulting practice today.

1 – Gemini was, is and may always be fad driven. Gemini was built on the transformation fad. The concept of going into a company and conducting an exhaustive and wide-ranging top to bottom analyses followed by a complete overhaul of the business. Hence the word transformation. The fad was borne out of the re-engineering craze made famous by Michael Hammer.

Gemini became too closely associated with this fad and when the fad lost its lustre, Gemini was tarnished with the same brush. There were other reasons why this failed. How many companies want to go through a root-canal type transformation? Not many. If they do choose to do this, how often do you think they want to do it? Not often. Do you think employees want to work with the consulting firm which caused all the pain with questionable results? It’s unlikely.

2 – Besides Gemini’s affinity for the transformation concept, which they seem to market less, but if you look carefully it is still woven through their literature, is their fundamentally flawed approach to consulting. Gemini’s model is built on the concept of selling a short, high-impact and usually lower priced business case/strategic assessment of the business. They will send in a case team to do a McKinsey style analyses over 8 to 10 weeks. This team goes a mile wide and an inch deep to develop a business case for change. Their aim is to convince the client to bring in Gemini for the implementation.

There are some inherent problems with this approach. For one, Gemini is conflicted. Clearly they need to sell the implementation to recoup the lower fees on the analyses. How can this be impartial advice? The quality on these analyses is not uniform. Some of these business case teams are very good and do excellent work. Others do really poor work and are just trying to secure the implementation.  Contrast this with a McKinsey, BCG or Bain team who views the strategic assessment as a separate study. They are willing to give an impartial assessment since they are not dependent on the fees from the next stage. Impartiality is critical to the client.

3 – Gemini does not seem to be interested in building a proper management consulting business. When times are good and the economy is doing well, they pump money into the consulting business. When times are bad, they not only cull staff, they shut down entire divisions and offices, and ultimately lose key people. There is a fundamental problem here. If they lose key people and are willing to do this, then it means Gemini believes consulting can be easily built by simply hiring a few good people when the times are good again. So where is the continuity, where are the people who keep up the meaning of the brand and culture?

4 – 90% of Cap Gemini is a technology shop. They are after all a massive technology outfit. In their larger offices, the technology employees form the bulk of employees. In fact, the technology staff can strangle management consulting projects. If EDF (a massive French utility), for example, wants the strategy group to check the payment systems, the technology group can easily say “no” since an unpopular strategy recommendation could potentially jeopardize larger and lucrative technology projects. Firms like Deloitte and Accenture are riddled with this problem.

An unexpected outcome of this is that remnants of the strategy capability have survived in some weird places. Places where the corporate office and the technology team are weak or non-existent. These are usually in the far-flung offices like Buenos Aires, Argentina and Johannesburg, South Africa. These offices licence the Cap Gemini brand, are smaller, were originally set up for strategy work and have no technology presence. They are islands fighting alone to do strategy work. So when they present their credentials as a part of the Cap Gemini group, it means next to nothing. Their skills, depth and experience are only as deep as their local office.

5 – Gemini consultants don’t have pride and don’t really believe they are as good as McKinsey, Bain or the BCG. If they don’t feel they are as good it does show through in their work, culture and advice. A colleague with a PhD in Computer Science from Caltech and a MBA from Wharton relayed the following story to us. He interviewed at Cap Gemini’s London office last year and the interviewer asked him “why does someone with your background and qualifications want to work at Gemini? Wouldn’t you prefer McKinsey?” You would think that at least the London office believed in themselves.

6 – Cap Gemini is a technology shop, brands itself this way and promotes people who nurture this core. The management consultants have limited opportunities to run the business. Investments which do not support the technology base are curtailed. Back in the day when Gemini was still a powerhouse, the US management consulting partners provided a counterweight to this. They set up a separate head office in Morristown and made the necessary investments in the consulting business. That is now over.

7 – Since when does a management consulting firm licence its brand? This is not a MacDonald’s line where every project can be run off a production line. Image and quality is so important in management consulting that any firm even thinking about licensing its name does not understand the sector. Cap Gemini continues to do this and charges a rather steep licensing fee of about $1m per an office or region interested in using its name and having access to its databases and qualifications.

8 – If you are going to licence your name, you would think Gemini would insist on certain standards and controls. You would expect regular interaction between the licensees and head office. This does not happen. What does this say about the company?

9 – The executive officers of the firm are all French and went to the prestigious Ecole’s. That is one problem with Cap Gemini. It alienated the US management consulting partners and never built then as a succession line into the business. Proper management consulting firms must be international in all respects. Cap Gemini is French and wants to be French. It sees that as its strength.

10 – Cap Gemini never exploited it’s rather central place in Europe. It has built no real presence in Eastern Europe. A market which as exploded for consulting services. Roland Berger has done the opposite and has built an enviable presence and track record in the former Soviet Union. In fact, only McKinsey has a better presence and track record.

11 – Cap Gemini is not a training ground for executives. That is after all the true long-term test of a management consulting firm. How many executives today, in France or the Fortune 500 can you find who earned their stripes at Cap Gemini? Not many. We checked.

12 – Cap Gemini really was on the right path. All those resources, intellectual property and knowledge are just lying in the firm and are dormant. If the company cannot leverage its own capabilities, how can it advise clients?

13 – Poor, poor knowledge management. This is the lifeblood of management consulting. Having the right knowledge and bringing it to the right problem at the right time. Cap Gemini’s knowledge exchange is IT dominated and most of the management consulting material is never uploaded. Offices don’t share and each creates its own silo of information. All of this flies counter to proper management consulting values.

What I Learned from the Firmsconsulting Guide to Roland Berger

Max (not his real name) is an aspiring consultant who is looking to secure an analyst role with one of the top firms for the upcoming recruitment cycle in September 2011. His interest in management consulting was sparked by a failed McKinsey interview last year. In this series of blogs, he will be sharing his background, case preparation process, useful resources, and any breakthroughs or setbacks that he experiences.

Today I would like to share with you my thoughts on the Roland Berger guide from Firmsconsulting. Read more

Rankings Guide to Roland Berger

Find our detailed guide to Roland Berger. The detailed appendices of the interviews with Roland Berger consultants and clients who contributed to the rankings will also be released shortly. It is important to NOT compare our ranking of RB to other sites without adjusting for several important differences. Read more

My Biggest Worries with the Case Preparation Process

Max (not his real name) is an aspiring consultant who is looking to secure an analyst role with one of the top firms for the upcoming recruitment cycle in September 2011. His interest in management consulting was sparked by a failed McKinsey interview last year. In this series of blogs, he will be sharing his background, case preparation process, useful resources, and any breakthroughs or setbacks that he experiences.

For those of you who are also in the recruiting process, I would like to share some of my current worries, and what I’m doing to combat them. Feel free to leave a comment and let me know what’s worrying you! My two biggest fears are: Read more

Understanding Deloitte Strategy & Operations

Monty (not his real name, but the name he asked us to use!) is a principal with Deloitte’s Strategy & Operations practice in the tri-state area, primarily working out of the New York office. He holds an MBA from a top-5 school, an engineering degree and has worked around the world for Deloitte.

He offered to pay for lunch. I am not saying this will sway the writing in a positive way, but if he lets me order the lobster…than I can only be so strong. He has gratefully agreed to an interview in Toronto, Ontario’s King West restaurant scene on this cooler June morning. Read more

“Should I join Capgemini?”

Dear Sarah,

The short answer is yes! The long answer is that sending such a short, non-descriptive email with little context of the role, location, practice, salary and your goals gives me little to go on. Read more

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