Innovation in consulting: Now is the time to do it differently

Innovation in consulting: Now is the time to do it differently

Consulting firms have never quite lived up to expectations around innovation. Post-pandemic, with clients looking for more imaginative solutions delivered more quickly, this needs to change.

Innovation has long been at the top of clients’ agendas when deciding which consulting firms to shortlist. As part of our ongoing research programme, we ask clients to rate the importance of around 15 attributes. Although all are important to some degree, an “innovative approach” is more important than anything else; however, it comes close to the bottom when we ask the same clients to rate individual firms’ strength in this area. Historically, that’s been an easy gap to ignore, if not to excuse, particularly as the global consulting industry has been growing at a relatively healthy 7-9% for almost a decade, defying predictions—including ours—of cyclical adjustments. But the crisis is creating a generation of business leaders who—spurred on by the speed and extent of the changes they’ve made in the last year—are looking for more imaginative solutions.

So why do consulting firms seemingly struggle to deliver innovative solutions to client issues? We’d like to suggest two problems, and one solution.

The first problem stems from confusion about what an “innovative approach” means. Clients often ask consultants to deliver a standard solution in an innovative way, but this is really a euphemism for doing something more cheaply. Less commonly, they seek help in making their—the client—organisation more innovative. By working side-by-side with client teams, consultants can encourage new ways of thinking but translating these into large-scale change is difficult: You can’t tell people to innovate any more than you can order them to be empowered. Conversations we’ve had with clients have highlighted a third, and perhaps more recent, meaning: The extent to which a consulting firm can look at a very specific problem and come up with an innovative solution for solving it. That’s the kind of lateral thinking which meant that, during the space race, when it emerged that pens don’t work in zero gravity, NASA invented an expensive pen that does work—and the Russians took a pencil. Of the three definitions, it’s the third that appears to add most value to clients, but it’s not always what they buy or get.

The second problem is focus. When Thomas Edison was trying to design a long-lasting incandescent lightbulb, he claimed that he and his team tested around 6,000 possible filaments. Although that figure is disputed, it highlights the importance of knowing precisely what the problem is you’re trying to solve, and the persistence required to find a viable solution. Consulting firms are rarely given such a clear brief, but even when they are, the pressure on time and budgets makes it hard to challenge assumptions and to come up with new ideas.

The solution to both issues lies in changing the client-consultant relationship. The term co-creation isn’t new, but it’s now applied liberally to any activity that has even the faintest whiff of collaboration. But the innovative ideas we’ve seen emerge from consulting firms in recent years have all stemmed from a deep and sustained conversation about a specific problem or opportunity, undertaken by experts. These aren’t conversations that you can have with every client: Consulting firms will need to pick and choose the organisations they want to work with on an exclusive basis. It also means creating joint “laboratories” in which the clients’ knowledge of potential products and services is mixed with consulting firms’ ability to re-engineer and accelerate processes, and to model consumer behaviour. As Edison said, “There’s a way to do it better—find it.”

Victor Hoong

Founder | Harnessing the true power of open talent for organizations and people

2 年

On topic of innovation I think a third under-estimated factor is talent diversity. Not of the racial/gender kind but in ways of thinking and professional backgrounds (that produce the lens through which consultants see the world). Most big consulting firms have their “type” - Accenture , Big 4 , MBB. The culture in those firms is so strong that the consulting immune system rejects ways of thinking/working that run against the grain. So in these firms you end up with highly homogenous set of individuals and mindsets. Creativity is amplified by co-creation not only because you have a group with more ideas but because you have a group of different sources of ideas. If we can look at a problem not only as strategy consultant or a business consultant but also as a designer, a CTO, a psychologist, a frontline worker - then we are getting somewhere. Put all those people into the same room to create together and now we have the potential for innovative magic! (Good post Fiona Czerniawska and congrats on what you’ve created with Source Global Research !)

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Andrew Wilson

No-Nonsense Certified SAP Technical Consultant | RISE with SAP | SAP ALM | Release Manager | SAP Basis |

3 年
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Igor Furniel

Founder & CEO GRUPO NEST (NTICS, Evolutto, Sustainable Business, Templum)

3 年

Great thoughts and points Fiona! In my opinion one innovative approach is to deliver the same service and result in a way clients did not expect. With the pandemic consultants around the world learned that to being available is more important than being present and clients realized that cost reduction is easy to achieve when logistcs is not an issue. The next step consultants must take is learning how to productize their methods to scale with quality and control, and it is mutch more then using tools for project mannaging!

Guilherme Kiellander

Especialista em digitaliza??o e escala para servi?os consultivos

3 年
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Morten Dalum

Energy Professional

3 年

Great post Fiona - thanks for sharing I certainly agree that it is time to do it differently - and I also agree we should challenge the client-consultant relationship. Co-creation may be a way to go, but maybe we should start with challenging who is the expert? Is it the consultant or is it the employees? I have never understood why we believe it is a great idea to let consultants show and tell the way? Hopefully we have a great team - hopefully they are experts in their field. If not, maybe we should start another place. The consultants certainly have a role to play and a need to solve. But maybe they should approach the relationship with a more humble attitude and understand that they don't necessarily must provide all the expert answers - but they can facilitate a process that provides the answers. Maybe that is the innovative approach demanded by the client-side?

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