It’s one person’s opinion, but here are 130 blog posts which I wrote over the last 3 years to describe my world-view of consulting. Hope you find it useful.

Consultants are a strange breed

We span all industries, but ultimately we are in the business of helping executives make difficult decisions and implement change. It is a combination of strategy (head), culture (heart), and operations (hand). Oddly, the most important ingredient is leadership, which consultants cannot provide. Only clients can provide the WHY that motivates people into action.

Consultants love data

First, clients struggle with it. They are like data hoarders who just watch it pile up and yet are afraid to confront it. For me, the idea of big data is a bit comical at times, since most clients cannot deal with their small data. Sometimes, you can just put the data into excel and quickly make sense of it. As a beginning consultant, you better be good with excel and powerpoint.

job-descriptions-by-ms-office-product

We obsess about data because is is apolitical, and provides credibility for our recommendations. In MBA, we all learned that averages are often the wrong answer, so we often use excel models to run “what if” scenarios and understand how (in)accurate a set of assumptions will be.  We are revision crazy and have a serious fear of failure.

When a MBA makes sense

Consultants have great tools and methodologies

Maturity models, evaluation frameworks, best practices, interviews, DMAIC, SIPOC, Poka-Yoke, Six Sigma, the list goes on and on.  Frameworks help you think through problems. However, the crux of consulting is asking good questions: who, what, why, when, where.  Some of the basic tenants of supply chain like LEAN apply to all industries.

Consultants are in the influence business

We borrow authority from our clients, to help them make change happen.  We make presentations, but don’t have the power; clients do.  The projects can be short, and yet, we need build rapport quickly. . .with IT for the data, with executive assistants to schedule meetings, and with stakeholders. A lot of times, our job is to nudge people to make decisions they know are right.  We think, write, communicate, then repeat the process.

think write communicate revise

(Good) consultants think like executives

Read what they read, find relevant surveys. Read Peter Drucker. Understand management trends. Think globally. Listen to relevant podcasts, TED talks or Stanford entrepreneur videos. Now a days, there are ivy-league level courses online for free. You can take accounting classes from Wharton; no dergee, but you will learn a lot. Quora is a great tool if you want a safe place to find out about 1st-hand management experiences.

Consultants (over)use PowerPoint to communicate

We use it daily. It starts with a strong understanding of the audience and purpose. First, does the structure support the narrative? Second, do the slides themselves make sense by themselves? Third, have your edited and put the finishing touches on the pages? Is the “deliverable” something you are proud of?

Severity of Powerpoint Issues

As with writing, brevity is the best. Make sure your slides have a clear point; it should not be ambiguous what you are saying. Some of this has to do with logical structure of what you are saying, while other times it is how the facts are laid out on the page.

Consulting Logic - Pyramid principle - Structuring Presentations

Consultants are intellectually curious

 McKinsey’s chairman once said that the best candidates were “insecure overachievers“. The best consultants are obviously smart, but also aware, fund and eager. They are fast learners, who are good at breaking problems down into mental lego pieces. You can apply consulting thinking to elections, college football, gift cards, Olympics, or the value of a a life.

Hypothesis

The fun part of consulting is tackling difficult problems.  That is probably why we use case interviews to test structured thinking. It’s rooted in hypotheses and the counter-intuitive method of guessing your way to a solution. There is always a trade-off, an opportunity cost that the client is not seeing; it’s our job to shed light on this.

SIPOC - Rule out Hypotheses

Consultants make clients successful

Sometimes the project scope is clear and sometimes it is not. We often have to find smart ways to say no to clients, for their own good. It’s not always the way you planned it in the proposal; you have to adapt.

Scope Creep

Clients also get caught up in bad corporate habits and inertia and lose effectiveness. Sometimes, they even hire us to be the bad guys. We never embarrass our clients; we allow them to “save face“. We will find a win-win solution for them. Even when we are building rapport, being likable, we also need to be ourselves, and be authentic.

Likable

Consultants get lazy

We have bad habits. Oh yes. We use jargon constantly. Sometimes, we rely too much of previous examples of the work, and recycle materials. Be careful, clients will fire you if you get too lax, then it will be resume time. We eagerly seek feedback to improve. As some say, you are only as good as your last project.

Cartoon Meeting Jargon

Consulting is a lifestyle

There are so many great things about the consulting lifestyle. It sounds glamorous – good pay, smart and amiable people, solving tough problems, good meals, and travel – but it’s not all rainbows and ponies. Lots of late nights.  No really, weekend work. But great consultants convert that stress into positive energy. Live to fight another day. Find good people to work – people who pass the airport test; spending 8+ hours stranded in an airport with. Find people you like working with.

Salary by Experience

Consulting is leverage model

Younger, newer, cheaper consultants do work which can be billed out at higher rates. There are finders (partners who find work), minders (who farm the projects), and grinders (who grind out the analyses). The projects with the highest leverage tend to be IT projects.

Finders Minders and Grinders

Consulting is an apprenticeship

It’s a tough business with a high level of attrition. Learn as much as your can from managers. Don’t want until the year-end review to see how you are doing.  Who wants to travel 80% of the time? We get paid well, and our clients want a good return on their money.

Apprentice

Consulting teams excel

Ultimately, consulting is about people. Partners and principals have the responsibility of building the team environment and culture. It’s a can-do culture; consultants don’t whine, we come up with solutions. It’s not all fun and games; there are times when it is a flat democracy and everyone’s voice should be heard, and other times, it can be a dictatorship to get things done.

Consultantsmind Dictator Mode

(Good) consultants innovate and have fun

Personally, some of the business problems that I find the most interesting are how smaller companies can scale quickly without losing their founder’s mentality. Even if you are not a technology consultants, you have to stay up on technology trends from 2014 and 2015. Unfortunately, data does not always give you the answer. Sometimes, it is a S-curve where the past does not predict the future. Find ways to be disruptive and innovate.  I always tell clients it is easy to attack complexity with complexity; it’s difficult to attack complexity with simplicity.

Any activity becomes creative when the doer cares about doing it right, or better.     – John Updike, author

Thanks for reading

In my first month, I had 1 view. . . don’t be afraid to put your thoughts out there.  If you like your work, someone else will too. Tap into that passion and get the chemicals flowing in your brain to do your best work.

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