| | By Stephen Humphreys
Last quarter I began by talking about growth. In January, the country’s GDP was falling but more recently the Office for National Statistics has shown that the fall was smaller than initially thought. George Osborne has delivered a “budget for growth”. I am optimistic for the next set of figures. A bit closer to home, January saw a 1.3% growth in service sector output, with “business services” posting a 1.4% growth.
Following on from the strong figures that the Big Four delivered (reported in the last edition), Accenture has had an equally strong start to the year. Its consultancy practice is 20% up on last year. And the Management Consultancy Group, which owns Kurt Salmon and Alexander Proudfoot has seen an 88% increase in operating profits.
KPMG & Hitachi have made sizeable acquisitions in the outsourcing space: KPMG with the purchase of Equa Terra, and Hitachi Consulting with 2,400 offshore employees in Sierra Atlantic. As part of the restructuring at LECG, FTI Consulting has taken over the majority of its UK offerings. I also hear murmurs across the market that other acquisitions are expected.
In line with the KPMG and Hitachi acquisitions, a number of large outsourcing deals have been declared which will require significant consultancy support. Efficio has won a five year procurement outsourcing deal with Thames Water, while Atos, Accenture and Capgemini have signed significant IT outsourcing deals with Siemens, the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) and BAA respectively.
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The Accenture deal is particularly noteworthy: the Ministry of Justice will pay Accenture £22m over five years. This is a significant development in the current public sector spending climate. There are rumours that a similar deal might be seen at the Department of Work and Pensions as well. Elsewhere in the public sector, readers of our regular column will have already learnt about the growing pockets of work in education and healthcare. McKinsey, PwC, Tribal and Niche Health & Social Care Consulting all report that initial work on business cases and feasibility studies have been carried out with GP consortia. In education, Mouchel is working on the developing academies projects, with the schools equivalent of GP consortia. Capita Consulting, Tribal and The Parthenon Group have been investing in their higher and further education practices. Universities and colleges have been seeking significant support as they adapt to the new fee models. Critically for the larger consultancies that operate in the public sector, Buying Solutions has announced a one year extension to the multi-disciplinary consultancy framework. This means that companies such as the Big Four and McKinsey can continue to bid for tendered government contracts.
Elsewhere in the consultancy industry, Paul Winter, of strategy consultancy Corpra, has been announced as the new president of the MCA. And the MCA Awards have been unveiled. Management consultancy firms performed very well in the Sunday Times Best Place to Work 2011 with six firms featuring in the top 25 of the large companies | |
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| | accountant Arthur Andersen did after Enron,” said Edward Helmore of thisismoney.co.uk. I am fascinated to see how this case develops, and to see how it impacts upon the industry; another “watch-and-wait” scenario.
Growth markets?
In terms of growth, the market is similar to that of earlier in the year. Financial services is enjoying continued strong growth. This is followed up by all commercial service lines; telecommunications & media, energy & utilities, pharmaceutical & life sciences and retail & consumer goods are all strong. In the service lines, we are seeing the most growth in procurement, supply chain and logistics in the commercial sectors and risk, regulation and broader operational consulting in financial services. We also have a better idea of what public sector consulting will look like going forwards; continued reduction from central governments, but growth is coming from the devolved areas of power; GPs, local governments, school ‘consortia’ and higher and further education.
These observations have all been echoed in Top-Consultant.com’s Annual Recruitment Channel Report, which examines forecasted growth areas for the next year. You can read that full recruitment report here.
We were pleased to have performed so well in the awards associated with the report. We were runners up in the best recruiter category, and Rachel Snelgar received an award for outstanding candidate feedback.
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Hiring trends
Top-Consultant.com’s Recruitment Channel Report also highlights the significant increase in expected attrition rates for the next 12 months. This, it believes, is driven by consultants who have not seen pay rises in three years, who rightly realise that the only sure way to get one is to move. The report predicts that consultancy companies will need to hire 23% of current head count in order to tackle attrition and meet growth targets.
News regarding the immigration cap remains important. As previously discussed the Tier 1 cap sits at 1,000 per year and the post-study work visa is to be changed significantly. This will have a big impact for consultancies hiring the top international candidates that study for an MBA in the UK. This, along with the increasing demand for EU language skills, creates significant opportunities for EU-based operational improvement and IT consultants particularly.
The number of senior hires being made is on the rise: Capco has taken on a number of new partners; Greenwich Consulting has taken a PwC partner, and Hitachi Consulting has named a new UK head who comes from Capgemini, for example. This is very good news for the wider recruitment market within consulting, as new senior hires invariably require the “pyramid” beneath them.
This remains an exciting time to move into consultancy!
Until the next quarter, enjoy the market! | |
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| | category. In the small companies category, our congratulations go to Qedis and Baringa Partners.
Alongside all this good news, consultancy firms are still operating in a marketplace that is healing. Although consultancy hiring is very much on the up, this isn’t the case everywhere. As such, firms are being much more innovative in their fee models. Performance related pay is very much on client organisations’ agendas. In the private sector this is particularly in the realm of procurement and cost-saving projects, where savings generated are easy to see, calculate and therefore bill on. The public sector has traditionally been keen on these models, but is less clear on how to implement them; something of a “watch-and-wait” in the market.
Shaking the industry is the Raj Rajaratnam insider trading trial in New York. Jurors have heard secretly-taped telephone conversations between Rajaratnam, who faces 14 counts of fraud, and high-level McKinsey executives who supplied the billionaire founder of the Galleon hedge fund with illegal tips about McKinsey clients. It doesn’t look good, especially when much of a consultancy’s reputation is built on it being able to keep boardroom confidentiality.
“How much damage the McKinsey brand has suffered is hard to gauge. Analysts warn that if corruption is believed to be systemic, the worst case scenario could see McKinsey collapse as the | |
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