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


  

Cross-selling: Could consulting firms learn from IKEA?

Tuesday 2nd Oct, 2018

By Fiona Czerniawska.

My husband, a mild-mannered but physically imposing man, once ripped up an IKEA catalogue in front of the store’s checkout assistant.

To be fair, we’d been waiting in the queue for two hours, having inadvertently visited the store on a morning when it started a major sale, but in our defence I’d plead that only a small number of the checkouts were manned, and that it was a long time since we’d had breakfast. We’d done the usual things—eyeing up the shelves of lingonberry jam, discussing whether that pot plant was just what was needed for the study, wondering why Swedish is the language it is. But two hours was still two hours, and by the time we started to load our heavy boxes on to a conveyor belt clearly designed for professional weightlifters, my husband had clearly had enough. “There’s no way we’re ever going to shop in Ikea again*,” he said, letting rip literally and figuratively.

You’re probably thinking that this doesn’t have much to do with consultants. Premium consulting, all expensive suits and business travel, seems a world away from cheerful flat packs, but pause for a moment. IKEA, we all know, isn’t really selling furniture, but the possibility that we could, for a fairly modest price, transform our home (and, ergo, our lives) into a relaxed, hygge-filled, Scandi experience. Similarly, consultants aren’t selling supply chain management, but an opportunity to have a world-class, seamlessly smooth fulfilment process. In fact, consultants are only just beginning to wake up to something that IKEA grasped decades ago, the idea that customers/clients are more likely to buy if you can make your vision tangible. Why else do IKEA stores force us to walk through a warehouse of fake rooms? With experience and innovation centres now popping up right across the world, it’s clear that consulting firms are now trying something similar (it may even explain why so many of them look so very Nordic).

But the other thing those rooms do is link products together. Like the sofa, why not buy the matching curtains? Why buy a table, when you can buy an entire roomful of carefully coordinated items? In other words, IKEA is doing what every medium-sized firm upwards would like to do: cross-sell. The challenge consulting firms face is that consulting services aren’t readily accessorised with each other in the way that IKEA products are (you can’t put them up with a screwdriver either, but that’s by the by). Experience centres are great at providing a space in which you can bring people with different skill sets together and let them develop new ideas, but there’s a danger that that’s all it is—an experience, at a time when clients want something more. Even the shiny new app you’ve developed under a client’s nose, as proof of how you can bring different types of expertise together, can tarnish when faced with the gritty reality of most client organisations. Without that tangibility, there’s a danger that clients may end up doing the equivalent of ripping up the catalogue.

Past research has told us that clients are quite comfortable with the notion of cross-selling, and largely believe that a consulting firm that’s done a good piece of work in one area may be well equipped to do equally good work elsewhere. The only caveat to this is that they want the price point for the new services to be comparable with that of the old service, which makes it hard for consulting firms to use the new services as a way to move up the value chain. More recently, it’s become clear not only that clients would like to buy more services from a smaller number of firms, but also that they want greater transparency around how firms link their services together in practice. IKEA’s operating model is clear for all of us to see, even if we don’t always like it, but the consulting industry’s? Despite its name, cross-selling can’t be just something that happens in the sales process, it’s something that has to deliver, and be seen to deliver, at every stage of a consulting engagement. Consulting firms have gone far by keeping their inside, well, inside, but that approach isn’t going to work in the future.

*For the record, we still shop there. Where else would we get our lingonberry jam?

Blog categories: 
Marketing, Client-consultant relationship, Business model

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.
3 + 16 =
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