Jump to navigation

Home
Login/Register
  • What we do
  • Who we are
  • Insights
  • Reports
  • White Space
  • Global Data Model
  • Emerging Trends
  • My account
 
 
 

Fiona Czerniawska

The year of “udsyn”

Alison Huntington

Who’s up and who’s down in the digital transformation war

Source EU

Brexit diary

Our directors are writing a series of blog posts about the UK public's choice to leave the EU

Read more


  

The invisible product

Wednesday 8th Jan, 2014

By Fiona Czerniawska

It’s the habits we can’t see which are the hardest to change.

We’re already well into our process of interviewing clients and consulting firms for our report on the UK consulting industry (out at the end of the month) and one of the constant themes we’re hearing is change.  Not change in terms of the numbers – no one expects the UK industry to explode into growth, although people are generally pretty positive – but change in terms of the shape and focus of consulting.  Sector knowledge is becoming increasingly important and therefore valuable to clients, but not necessarily clients in that industry: some of the biggest projects we’ve heard about have involved taking the knowledge of one industry to another (retailing to telecoms and healthcare, for example).  Similarly, the most significant functional opportunities appear to be those which straddle conventional service definitions: ‘transformation’ is only the most obvious of these, embracing elements of strategy, operational improvement and, inevitably, technology.  Yet clients, who, we know, are interested in solutions and outcomes, continue to buy traditionally-defined consulting services, so what’s going on?

Part of the blame can be laid fairly and squarely at the feet of procurement people.  Although breaking consulting firms’ capabilities down by category is better than dumping all firms into the same bucket, the categories themselves are reinforcing the traditional boundaries between consulting services.  But consultants haven’t helped.  For all the discussions about propositions, it doesn’t take much for a consultant to revert to what they know best, for a discussion about business models, for example, to collapse into a conventional process improvement project.

But perhaps neither side is helped by the fact that consulting, despite attempts to industrialise it, to tie payment to performance and to embed software and other ‘assets’ in the consulting process, remains intangible.  It’s easier, I’d argue, to innovate around concrete products, for two reasons.  First, with something tangible it’s easier for you and your customers to see what’s changed, so there’s a positive feedback loop: imagine what it would be like trying to interest people in a new type of phone which no one could see.  Second, mental models are much harder to change than physical ones: think how difficult it would be to shift people’s idea of the colour blue, for example.  The real problem in developing new consulting services is that you have to think differently, talk differently, organise your business differently – often about service lines with which people (clients and consultants) are so familiar they barely notice.  Conceptual ‘products’ aren’t just intangible, but invisible: to change them, you have to see them, but, in seeing them, you reinforce them.  It’s tempting to say that consultants are caught between a rock and a hard place – but at least you can see those.

Blog categories: 
Marketing

Add new comment

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions. The validation is not case sensitive.
5 + 11 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.

Share this article

Twitter icon
Facebook icon
LinkedIn icon
e-mail icon

Subscribe to our content

Subscribe to Source Global Research blog
Subscribe

Categories


  • All items

  • Market conditions
  • Business model
  • Client behaviour
  • Client-consultant relationship
  • Strategic planning
  • Marketing
  • Thought leadership
  • Strategy consulting
  • Big Four firms
  • Brand
  • For your amusement
  • Technology consulting
  • Quality and value
  • Pricing
  • Management thinking
  • Procurement
  • Innovation
  • Growth
  • Digital
  • Skills and development
  • Consulting in the GCC
  • Instinct
  • Specialist firms
  • Recession
  • Financial services consulting
  • HR consulting
  • Public sector consulting
  • Talent
  • IT consulting
  • Brexit Diary
  • Risk
  • Advice vs implementation
  • Internal consultants
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Globalisation
  • Tax
  • What we do
  • Who we are
  • Insights
  • Reports
  • White Space
  • Global Data Model
  • Emerging Trends
  • My account
  • Login
  • Create a new account
  • Reset your password

© 2009 - 2025 Source Information Services Ltd | Registration No: 06439935
Terms and conditions of use | Privacy policy

    • What we do
    • Who we are
    • Insights
    • Reports
    • White Space
    • Global Data Model
    • Emerging Trends
    • My account
    • Contact
      Contact us

      If you'd like to hear more about how we can help, call us on:
      +44 (0)20 3478 1204
      +1 (0)800 767 8058
      or email us here.

      Become one of us

      We’re always on the lookout for bright and enthusiastic people who would like to join us in our adventure.
      Interested?
      View our careers page here

      Head office address

      20 Little Britain
      London EC1A 7DH
      United Kingdom