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


  

Hope, luck, and fear: Not a good strategy

Wednesday 25th Apr, 2018

By Fiona Czerniawska.

All of our research on the consulting industry at the moment points to a slowdown in the rate of growth in consulting. There’s still a lot of investment and activity among clients: 93% say they’re looking to increase productivity and efficiency; 92% are investing in digital transformation. But the proportion of people who say that their expenditure on consulting services will increase in the next year has fallen from 72% last year to 55%.

Hope luck fear.png

One of the truisms of consulting is that everyone benefits from a growing market—that a rising tide lifts all boats. But a market that’s growing at a lower rate than in previous years feels much less benign because the change in tempo is usually unevenly distributed—some boats stay still or sink, while others may do better than ever. Whether your consulting firm is a rising boat, or is becalmed, watching other boats around you rise more quickly, now is a good moment to make sure that your strategy is—well—water-tight.

Sadly, that’s not always the case…

When James Cameron started filming Avatar, he had T-shirts made for the film crew with the words “hope is not a strategy, luck is not a factor, and fear is not an option”. Yet, a lot of the business plans we see from consulting firms depend heavily on one of these, and sometimes all three:

  • The hope strategy comes naturally to consultants, who are inherently optimistic and subscribe to the belief that a number in a PowerPoint deck is just as good as a number in reality, and that you don’t really need more—any!—supporting information on how you’re going to deliver this. Seasoned strategy spotters will know that hope strategies come in many guises, but somewhere at their heart is a really big assumption that no one has actually tested.
  • The luck strategy is based on a different assumption: That poor performance one year—a boat that’s left behind—stems from factors outside your control (a more difficult market, a challenging client, a sudden change in direction or leadership in a client’s organisation). It’s an argument for helplessness: If bad luck is the reason why you didn’t do well last year, the best you can hope for is better luck next year. In other words, it’s not so much a strategy as a period of existential paralysis: You don’t know what to do, so you do nothing.
  • A strategy that’s born from fear leads to poor decision-making, and frenetic activity. It’s based on the assumption that something is better than nothing, but as at any point when we’re frightened, our brains close down, and we’re less capable of coming up with the creative ideas that might actually save the day.

We’ve been writing a lot in this blog about instinct recently. It’s instinct that makes us hope, encourages us to depend on luck, and makes us frightened. And it’s not the basis for a good strategy.

Blog categories: 
Instinct

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.
8 + 12 =
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