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The many-sided crisis in consulting

Disruption is coming to bite the industry that made a cult of it.

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Consulting itself will have to change, because technology can today do so much at the lower end of the pay scale.

Consulting itself will have to change, because technology can today do so much at the lower end of the pay scale.

PHOTO: PEXELS

Rana Foroohar

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I once worked for a large magazine company in the US that was worried about falling revenues and loss of readership amid what was then called the dot.com revolution. Corporate leaders decided to hire a major management consulting firm to analyse what should be done. After months of meetings and millions in fees, the verdict came in. Apparently, we just needed better story ideas. Needless to say, this sage advice saved neither readers nor the product.

For this and other reasons, I have always been sceptical of management consulting. For starters, the “if you can measure it, you can manage it” approach to business just misses so much. Certain things, such as input costs and share price, can be discretely tallied. Others – like culture, loyalty and creativity – cannot.

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