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The Hiring Freeze 3 / 5 / 2009
By Jacqueline Durett
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While the global ecomony’s been going downhill for more than a year
now, the management consulting industry had actually stayed
Subscribe somewhat insulated, thanks to the nature of longterm contracts and
ongoing projects. But that’s changing. Watson Wyatt says 23 percent of
all U.S. firms plan layoffs this year, and some of those firms are
RANKINGS consultancies. In fact, some industry giants like Unisys have already
» Best Firms to Work For 2009 reduced headcount. In this environment, layoffs are inevitable, but does
» The Best Places to Stay, 2009 that mean firms have turned off the recruiting spigot and capitulated in
» Seven Small Jewels 2009: The the war for talent?
Hidden Gems of the Profession
Hardly. Smart consultancies realize that there’s more talent available
» View all
right now than there has been in years. For instance, MBAs don’t see
financial services as a safe sector to be in, and financial services firms aren’t hiring anyway. “It’s pretty obvious
INTERVIEWS
that the students who were interested in banking have gravitated to the consulting pool, and then the other
» One on One with Accenture's students who wanted consulting all along feel that they’re facing then a more competitive pool, which they aren’t
David McCurley
happy about,” says Carla Edelston, senior associate director at Northwestern University’s Kellogg Career
» Consulting One on One with Management Center.
Romil Bahl
» One on One with OMNI's Frank But Bob Damon, president, North America, of executive recruitment firm Korn/Ferry International says it’s still
Bernhard more likely we’ll see more cuts at many firms before hiring picks up. “Generally what happens with service firms is
» Out of Office: Roz Savage in a downturn, they don’t right-size themselves quickly enough. And so in a downturn, they’re trailing indicators,”
» View all he says. And while some firms’ staffing strategies make headlines, it’s hard to know what’s happening at private
companies, aside from anecdotal experience. “They probably are all right-sizing,” Damon says of the consulting
CONSULTING MAGAZINE
industry at large.
UPCOMING EVENTS
Some Good News
Financial Services Forum:
Foresight Into Emerging But the news isn’t all bad. Healthcare, IT services and energy are still growth fields, says Jonathan Phillips,
Consulting Demand - New York - founder of Magellan International, a professional services search firm. “There are happy spikes,” he says.
March 25, 2010 “Healthcare is a going to be a happy spike because people are aging. Smart grids are going to be a happy spike
in the energy sector. M&A work in energy will be a happy spike because the industry is going to continue to
Consulting Firm Leadership
consolidate.”
Roundtable 2010 - Chicago - May
4, 2010
In addition, he says, many firms are looking at the success of traditional crisis-management firms Alvarez &
Consulting Summit - Adapting to Marsal and AlixPartners and are launching restructuring practices. “They filled a niche during a growth period
Market Realities - May 5, 2010 which has given them permanent market share that now some of those strategy firms would like to have,” Phillips
» View all says. “So Bain is trying to build a corporate restructuring group. BCG is trying build a restructuring group. They’re
all looking at the market share that was gained by AlixPartners and Alvarez & Marsal, and trying to get it back, but
they can’t.”
And those sectors and practices could open doors to students who are looking to parlay what they originally
planned to do with their business careers into a consulting career instead. Edelston says students are trying to
find consulting work that relates to whatever field they initially wanted to pursue, such as private equity. “Firms like
LEK and Parthenon might have been on a smaller number of students’ radar screens, but now are on many more,
and my guess is they had probably more applicants than they’ve ever had,” Edelston said. “Because for students
who couldn’t get private equity, this is the next best thing they could do, work for a firm that has a private equity
practice or that does some sophisticated advising related to some aspect of private equity.”
But even though some sectors are growing and some students are getting flexible, it’s all for naught if firms aren’t
actually hiring. Edelston says it’s still a little early in the MBA hiring cycle to see how many firms are shifting their
hiring strategy, but Korn/Ferry’s Damon is seeing a definite trend. “I think the softness in the professional services
has been with us for probably the last [eight] months or so. I think that they’re experiencing the same thing that a
lot of service companies are: Corporations aren’t spending millions of dollars for a strategy assignment these days
because they haven’t got the money to do it.” And that means an imbalance in supply and demand. “I would say
that our professional services industry is a little soft, but I think that when companies like Bain come to us, we feel
pretty confident that there’s a pool of talent that is available that we can deliver to them if they need to hire
people.”
A New Breed of Consultant
But Phillips says firms are hiring—it’s just that now they want a different type of consultant. At the beginning of last
year, he says, “We suddenly heard from a lot of our consulting clients, ‘Let’s just hire the person we really need.’
So most of our consulting clients began to delay and focus on hiring only those people they really needed, and
part of the trend here, especially with globalization, is that the client is asking for a different sort of delivery
person.” That person, he says, is a trusted adviser with real content knowledge who can serve in a very specific
role. “And those are the searches we’re seeing. We’re being asked for laser-specific people, like retail banking,
but someone who worked for the banks during this chaotic period.”
Damon adds that firms also are more interested in candidates who have hybrid experience. “[Consulting firms]
would typically like to go into a company where someone from Bain left after four or five years to work for a
company, maybe started [at that company] in a strategy role, maybe then moved over to an operating role and
http://consultingmag.com/article/ART234840?C=epcOYSXy6l84ocv6 3/26/2010