Screenshot of Last Week Tonight segment on “McKinsey” (at about 25:36)

John Oliver’s Last Week Tonight with its well-researched and in-depth segments of journalism in satire’s clothing regularly manages to escape the 24-hour news cycle and instead set the agenda themselves. And if John Oliver takes on large consulting firms in general and McKinsey in particular, it is a must-watch for any student and scholar of management and organization studies. Check it out:

I would have enjoyed this piece very much, hadn’t it been all too accurate a depiction of systemic deficiencies in our contemporary corporate world. And while I really applaud the way the segment demonstrates that the problem with McKinsey is not one of “bad apples” but rather systemic, indeed, it does not really offer suggestions on how to improve the situation.

So what could be done to at least contain some of the systemic problems associated with large management consultant firms in both private and public sector contexts:

  • Size and market concentration matter. Among the key reasons why conflict of interests become ubiquitous is the market dominance of the Big Three consultant firms (similar to the problematic dominance of the Big Four accounting firms). Aside from breaking up those firms entirely (which seems difficult under current antitrust regimes), a first step could be waiting periods after consulting projects are finished before these firms can be re-hired, as well as self-commitments to only contract with non-Big-Three firms after any contract with one of those. (In the case of accounting firms, switching the auditor every five years is already good corporate practice.)
  • Special rules for particularly large consultancies: For consultancies above certain revenue thresholds, additional transparency regulations should apply, such as full and real-time client and project lists, including names of assigned consultants.
  • Limits on public sector consulting: Introducing restrictive limits for consulting services across the public sector, together with legally mandated transparency for any consulting contract awarded there. Today, it is often easier to outsource whole operations to ridiculously expensive consultancies than to invest in building in-house capacities for fulfilling even basic public services. Of course, this would require acknowledging that public sector solutions can – and often will – be more efficient than purchasing ready-made market-based solutions.
  • Tax and cap excessive earnings: Measures affecting both Big Three consultants and their top management clients would be higher taxes on the top one percent of top earners and restrictions on bonuses, which reward short-term orientation of consulting projects.

In addition to these rather structural measures, segments such as the one embedded above are important reminders of the limitations of the knowledge even the most reputable consulting firms are able to command – and of the conflicts of interest inherent to the fact that expensive management consultants are only hired by members of top management teams. So it should not come as a suprise that they first and foremost serve those people that have the power to hire them, with employees, shareholders and the public at large paying the price.

https://osconjunction.net/2023/10/24/capable-of-anything-culpable-for-nothing-last-week-tonight-with-john-oliver-on-mckinsey/

#JohnOliver #LastWeekTonight #managementConsultants #McKinsey

McKinsey: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)

YouTube
The Guardian view on management consultants: overused, underperforming - The Guardian https://apple.news/AKsK9j6YhTJuA8ITgkmUIDg #managementconsultants #uk
The Guardian view on management consultants: overused, underperforming — The Guardian

Editorial: The omnipresence of consultancies is harming public services, while creating lucrative opportunities for private profit

Laleh Khalili · In Clover: What does McKinsey do?

The primary product sold by all management consultants – both software developers and strategic organisers – is the...

London Review of Books

#managementconsultants call them 'alumni' networks;

Its really more like sleeper cells inserted into businesses who then 'wake-up' to ensure their previous employer is contracted to offer (usually tepid & cookie-cutter) advice at great costs.

This 'network' of agents or collaborators is (partly at least) why #corporations continue to buy advice that again & again can be seen to be at best worthless & sometimes actually harmful!

[p.s.; so like 'curate', 'alumni' has been repurposed in meaning]

#UnpopularOpinion: Mariana Mazzucato argues that #ManagementConsultants are hobbling the #state’s ability to perform the role of #economic motor https://www.ft.com/content/fb1254dd-a011-44cc-bde9-a434e5a09fb4
Client Challenge

More on the 'outdoor relief' for the #professionalservices class... after earlier this week the Govt. dropped limitations on budget allocations to #consultants (not the medical sort), it now emerges that the #NHS spent over £80m on #managementconsultants last year - there's no money for a wage rise for #nurses, but there's plenty to fund the big firms offering 'advice' on how to deal with the #NHScrisis (in itself a crisis brought about by defunding!)

@openDemocracy
https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/nhs-consultants-spending-millions-2022-covid/

NHS quadrupled consultancy budget to £83m in 2022

Exclusive: NHS England allocated £83m for outsourced consultants last year – enough to train more than 1,600 new nurses

openDemocracy

"The primary product sold by all #ManagementConsultants (..) is the theology of #capital. This holds that #workers are expendable. (..) #Managers are necessary to the functioning of corporations – or universities, or non-profit organisations – and the more of them the better."

#LalehKhalili reviews #WaltBogdanich & #MichaelForsythe's #WhenMcKinseyComesToTown: The Hidden Influence of the World’s Most Powerful Consulting Firm

#McKinsey #books #ManagementCulture

#LRB

https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v44/n24/laleh-khalili/in-clover

Laleh Khalili · In Clover: What does McKinsey do?

The primary product sold by all management consultants – both software developers and strategic organisers – is the...

London Review of Books
"The primary product sold by all management consultants – both software developers and strategic organisers – is the theology of capital. This holds that workers are expendable. They can be replaced by machines, or by harder-working employees" Thorough critique of McKinsey, Deloitte, E&Y, KPMG, PwC, Boston Consulting Group, Andersen Consulting. By the wonderful Laleh Khalili in #LondonReviewOfBooks
https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v44/n24/laleh-khalili/in-clover
#ManagementConsultants
#Corruption #Bribery #StateCapture
Laleh Khalili · In Clover: What does McKinsey do?

The primary product sold by all management consultants – both software developers and strategic organisers – is the...

London Review of Books