What you often hear in relation to this crisis is the "up-or-out" policy of consulting firms. Check out our video in which we explain the concept in detail: kzbin.info/www/bejne/eJLFeY1tecyGgM0
@user-jj9eh9vf7u6 ай бұрын
Having worked for execs with backgrounds like McKinsey, my overwhelming impression is that they have a lot of stamina for meetings, long hours and an ability for public speaking. But no substance. Not sure a dip in consulting will actually affect the real world..
@spg66516 ай бұрын
"BUT NO SUBSTANCE " rightly said . Meeting per se is non productive .. Nothing will emerge out of meeting -- Action only creates value -- Hence those long hours of meeting is counter productive -- I can give many examples.
@kira09926 ай бұрын
they earned multi bilions dollars per year, that's what they affect the real world.
@spg66516 ай бұрын
@@kira0992 You see - Unequal distribution of wealth leads to KARL MARK to emerge once again -- I have seen multiple Consultants whose salary in INDIA was in crores in 2010 .. They are common people like me perhaps less intelligent than us .. BUT they get undue importance of their so called intelligence and paid heavily .. Some people say all consulting assignment is MONEY LAUNDERING exercise for the company executive where in paid Rs 25 crores and got back 15 crores through Laundering .. Quite possible .. I know big Audit firms actually put some clauses in their audit report so that they get Consulting assignment .. This has been banned in India now .. Hence All that money they get they do not deserve .. Its exploitation of the world
@sjg98876 ай бұрын
If this entire industry were to disappear tomorrow, the only difference would be more money in the pockets of companies and governments to spend on things that actually matter.
@spg66516 ай бұрын
@@sjg9887 I agree fully 100 %. These consulting firms DO NOT ADD VALUE at all .. They are costly people only interact with TOP officials perhaps due to thier support to Money laundering .. They charge say Rs 50 crore consulting assignment out of which Rs 25 crores comes back to the top officials individually privately -- Generally TOP OFFICIALS children foreign college fee is paid by consultants or top officials children gets top end car etc.. that is how money laundering happens .. It is known to all including Tax officials .. They can not take action as there is no LAW to curb such activities
@kortyEdna8255 ай бұрын
More and more people might face a tough time in retirement. Low-paying jobs, inflation, and high rents make it hard to save. Now, middle-class Americans find it tough to own a home too, leaving them without a place to retire.
@carssimplified21955 ай бұрын
The increasing prices have impacted my plan to retire at 62, work part-time, and save for the future. I'm concerned about whether those who navigated the 2008 financial crisis had an easier time than I am currently experiencing. The combination of stock market volatility and a decrease in income is causing anxiety about whether I'll have sufficient funds for retirement.
@foden7005 ай бұрын
This is precisely why I like having a portfolio coach guide my day-to-day market decisions: with their extensive knowledge of going long and short at the same time, using risk for its asymmetrical upside and laying it off as a hedge against the inevitable downward turns, their skillset makes it nearly impossible for them to underperform. I've been utilizing a portfolio coach for more than two years, and I've made over $800,000.
@PatrickFitzgerald-cx6io5 ай бұрын
How can I reach this person?
@foden7005 ай бұрын
Marisa Michelle Litwinsky’’ is her name. She is regarded as a genius in her area and works for Empower Financial Services. She’s quite known in her field, look-her up.
@PatrickFitzgerald-cx6io5 ай бұрын
Thanks a lot for this suggestion. I needed this myself, I looked her up, and I have sent her an email. I hope she gets back to me soon.
@muazmohd74577 ай бұрын
MBB consultant here. 2023 was indeed a tough year pipeline wise. But 2024 seems to be very promising.
@CaseInterviewHub7 ай бұрын
That's great to hear! Do you think this is a general trend or do you think that's more restricted to the industry or region you're focused on? We're seeing slight improvements, but definitely not 2021 levels.
@muazmohd74577 ай бұрын
@@CaseInterviewHub it seems like it’s regional. Pipeline is full where Im at across different industries
@tilelate97187 ай бұрын
Think its going to be bad all the way to 2026
@AirForceA7x7 ай бұрын
They just use the current buzzword “ai” and get business
@vaibhav-bhavsar6 ай бұрын
Why they are are not optimistic even for the next 9 month's?
@MrPasqual16 ай бұрын
Former MBB here. Consulting will never go broke as incompetent management and bullshit presentations made by freshly graduated experts will always be in fashion 😂
@erikanderson1402Ай бұрын
The government made consluttting profitable… the government can make conslutting unprofitable
@parasdutta50037 ай бұрын
I have been with an MBB from last 7 years, 2023 was the worst appraisal cycle
@masterchief73016 ай бұрын
How it's 2024 looking like?
@samwang58316 ай бұрын
As the old saying goes : Consultants borrow your watch to tell you the time. You could have done it yourself but you want the consultants to legitimize firing your buddy or to take the fall when things go south. A capable leader would have no use for consultants
@dylanbaker57665 ай бұрын
AI will replace consultants. The algorithm says you're lazy... Get out. Basically Microsoft is building a consultant in a box.
@danieln.25906 ай бұрын
it never made sense to me that I have to pay hundreds of dollars per hour for a consultant with very little real-world and hands-on experience to tell me how I should do things.
@juliopaveif5 ай бұрын
It's easy to explain. Outsourced accountability for managers.
@leochen8876 ай бұрын
I'm an 85 year old retired aerospace engineer who "rode" the Cold War which lasted until 1991. My specialty began with combat aircraft and concluded with space satellites. I retired three times. The last time was an offer from Boeing Satellite in California and I remember asking my wife if I should take it. She said, I don't think that you should, so I said, okay, but you're gonna have to support me. (That was a joke.) My tool kit (resume) included that I was a Vietnam War Vet, I had high government security clearances, I was a certified engineer (my certifications were up to date), I began my career at a nuclear weapons research lab, I worked at major aerospace companies including at Edwards AFB, I was program mgr for projects worth up to 188 Million in 1992 dollars, I had excellent references, etc. Combat aircraft aerospace engineers were in short supply. Bottom line, I worked in the field vs. having a desk job. (That meant that I didn't have to wear a suit, though I often earned more than my mgr.)
@leochen8876 ай бұрын
FWIW, in the seventies we were working on combat aircraft that didn't need pilots because pilots (humans) weren't quick enough, could not withstand the physical and psychological stresses imposed, and the life support systems were heavy, expensive, and humans were becoming obsolete, if truth be told. The writing was on the wall.
@monilshah34845 ай бұрын
I'm a Tier 2 Consultant at a Procurement consulting firm. There was slight uncertainty in business with no line of sight. But in Q1 2024, the firm grew 10-12% and the future growth looks promising
@kristiant60566 ай бұрын
Cheap money enabled companies to outsource expertise that they would be able to achieve with their own resources. And in my opinion at better results. An extended consultancy business at this level is overrated and likely unnecessary. Demand decrease makes sense here.
@CaseInterviewHub6 ай бұрын
You can argue about that. Building expertise internally isn’t for free either, so not only a question about cheap money. Fully agreed, though, you shouldn’t outsource your core competencies. But the bread and butter of MBB, strategic projects and large scale organizational transformation, that’s not easy to internalize. Who would do that? A ragtag team of HR people, accountants, sales people? No, you rather hire an outside team where the lead partner did that kind of project 20 times already in different settings for different clients.
@cb86086 ай бұрын
@@CaseInterviewHubI disagree. Corporates have the people in them to innovate and strategize, it's just the way these companies are set up is to stifle it. Management almost never consults lower ranks about higher level strategy even though these workers know the business model better than anyone.
@mengtaozhao6 ай бұрын
@@CaseInterviewHuband they spell the client’s name wrong in the slides.
@sjg98876 ай бұрын
@@CaseInterviewHubMaybe the management teams could come up with and implement new strategies and restructurings? You know, the people who actually know the company and the product? As it has been done since forever in good companies and governments? We end up doing most of the actual work that these consultants get paid for anyway.. Why pay millions for an inexperienced 28 yo to make a power point? While the project lead does politics? It is the local teams that have to give the consultant all the data and explain to them how everything works and then after the power point is made, they are the ones who figure out a way to actually implement that nonsense. Is the consultant really necessary? Especially given the cost? I think the world is catching on to the fact that no, they aren’t.
@sagara16096 ай бұрын
Career consultant here. I will weigh in. I agree with @caseinterviewhub on this one. A lot of the times a company hires consultants because it they simply do not have the skills to do it on their own ..nor does it make sense to hire the talent just for one project. Another reason (and less-known reason) is that the companies (ie mgmt) want to transfer the risk by hiring consulting firms so that they don't have to take the blame if something goes wrong but can take the credit if things goes well with the project. So their mgmt position is intact in the firm regardless of the outcome of the project. There will always be demand for consultants - the demand will vary based on economic cycles but simply won't just go away.
@user-wr4yl7tx3w5 ай бұрын
i noticed that a lot of consulting is just political cover for the c suite, to provide a veneer of legitimacy for the direction or course of action. that's why display is more important than substance.
@vitaliilukin25056 ай бұрын
MBB in Middle East, The local pipeline is ok but not spectacular, there are a lot entry level people on the beach, Though Europe is much worse, some friends in Milan are sitting without a project for 3/4 months The biggest problem is over-hiring in 2021/2022, a lot of people came September-December 2023 and don’t have a single project or have only one under their belt
@CaseInterviewHub6 ай бұрын
Sounds like a spot-on description. This matches our observations
@soteroalvarado31615 ай бұрын
They should get a consultant to help them solve the crisis.
@masbro-jk5bg6 ай бұрын
this info is accurate, we already shifting from "consulting company" to "company that do consulting AND impementing". Fun fact, The new company that do consulting AND implementing principality is EX MBB. Sometimes, client hijack MBB principal to work for them directly.
@peternguyen36456 ай бұрын
I worked as a consultant for 2 years at Accenture, glad I left for start ups, not sure why people are still doing consulting lmao
@CaseInterviewHub6 ай бұрын
Would you have/could you have landed in your current spot without the Accenture experience?
@thepinoyboomer6 ай бұрын
Accenture is a sweatshop, always is and always will be. It was a relief that I have left them. There are other companies that are better for freshers as well.
@TheZone10076 ай бұрын
cause it was accenture lmao
@southoceann6 ай бұрын
@@CaseInterviewHub Some people eat all the fruit then chop the tree and say what a useless tree, no fruits at all!
@JohnSmall3146 ай бұрын
@@CaseInterviewHub "Would you have/could you have landed in your current spot without the Accenture experience?" Accenture has a very bad reputation amongst developers who actually know how to code. Experience at Accenture is a negative on someone's resume.
@istvanpraha6 ай бұрын
Going to fresh grads for advice never made sense. But the people with real advice may not have the most polished titles or resumes so don’t get sought out
@tenko55416 ай бұрын
How dense are you? The fresh grads just do the groundwork. The real advisors are the balding 40+ year olds. Idk why people actually believe a CEO is taking advice from junior associates.
@CaseInterviewHub6 ай бұрын
Fully agree - one of our videos addresses exactly this topic. Feel free to check it out: kzbin.info/www/bejne/a5nGeGSOd8R7g5o
@sjg98876 ай бұрын
@@tenko5541People with experience in consulting don’t really have experience… Even the balding 40yo sometimes has never seen the implementation of any of these strategies through. If your experience is making PowerPoints and then leaving, I’m sorry but you don’t have experience… There are some very good clips of Steve Jobs making this point. In addition if there is only the project lead with “experience” most of the times they will be focused on politics and sales, it is the inexperienced guys doing all the analysis and work in the end.
@Vigilant_warrior_085 ай бұрын
@@tenko5541even with senior balding men behind them it doesn't quite make sense since most of them probably didn't have the required and necessary mindset and skillset that might be relevant to the particular client's field
@tacticalforesightconsultin4535 ай бұрын
Yea, I’d def prefer someone with near similar education and much more continuous and diverse irl experience
@LinhNguyen-im4uu6 ай бұрын
Ex-Big 4 here. Things were pretty dire when I left a month ago. Most of the seniors worth their salt jumped ship back to industry long before I did. All the expertise in different tech and software we worked so hard to acquire were lost because tech-focused people always got shafted when it came to promotion, and left in frustration. There were more managers and above than junior consultants and analysts in my offering when I left. Glad I managed to get out eventually.
@alexnash25625 ай бұрын
Yet you went to capgemini right after?
@LinhNguyen-im4uu5 ай бұрын
@@alexnash2562 I did not go there, I went back to doing more traditional supply chain stuff
@JakoWako6 ай бұрын
Based off this video it seems that consulting isn’t determined by the overall economy, but instead by the amount of cheap/free money available. Pre-COVID we had low interest rates, during COVID we had even lower rates and PPP money and consulting has only taken a hit once the Fed raised rates. Meanwhile corporate profits are higher now than they were Pre-COVID so it’s not like they’re cutting back out of necessity. I don’t think we’ll have 3-4% loans back anytime soon so consulting may not return to its 2022 and prior glory for a while.
@CaseInterviewHub6 ай бұрын
I think we never talked about interest rates, but mentioned the overall state of the economy right in the beginning. The interest rates don’t play a massive role, a 5$m consulting budget won’t be affected by that as much as a company’s billion dollar capex. You don’t take out big loans for consulting projects. The geopolitical uncertainty and other reasons we mention are probably more important. Some people here mentioned AI: we don’t think that’s so relevant yet. Or the firms have grown too fast and the pendulum swings back for a bit. But it’s not a 100% clear what caused it, it may be a combination of factors. Here’s another opinion in last week‘s FT: www.ft.com/content/89e8de5c-7a98-4033-a757-14c703139cfb
@cb86086 ай бұрын
@@CaseInterviewHubwhat geopolitical uncertainty?
@southoceann6 ай бұрын
It's simple supply vs demand. Each time in history, a different thing triggers a boom in demand. Last time it was a combination of cheap money, high market confidence and huge disruptions in the global economy (read: geopolitics). Next time it will be something else inflating demand, and consulting firms will continue playing catch-up. History never repeats, but it sure rhymes.
@ash382876 ай бұрын
I would only partially agree that a strong economy is good for consultants and a weaker one is bad. Speaking as an ex-consultant (Anl-Dir, Big 4), consulting work is more a function of 'need for change' than of strength or weakness. Sure, that can be in a booming market, where you get the organisational equivalent of ‘keeping up with the Jones’ - every CEO feels they need to do everything to stay ahead of their competitors, but it's scarcely less true in a bear market, where there’s a steady flow of projects focused on understanding the uncertainty and, in the worst cases, Restructuring. The worst kind of market for consulting in my experience is a ‘gentle bull’, where companies don’t feel particularly threatened, there’s little motivation to change the status quo, and consultants just look very expensive on the bottom line, which I think is essentially what you’re describing as the ‘slowdown’, but maybe with slightly different reasons. Better gauges to overall Consulting market activity (not specific types of Consulting) might be the level of technological and regulatory change in an industry. Just my take.
@jimbojimbo68736 ай бұрын
This is great except the fact Companies first reduction in cost is the cost of change, so unless you are like Alvarez and Marsall doing restructuring and litigation work you will suffer, the way all the big 4 have had to do mass redundancies which doesn’t happen in good times.
@jimbojimbo68737 ай бұрын
Would be great to see the big 3 go down
@CaseInterviewHub7 ай бұрын
Would be interesting to better understand your perspective on this take. What do you think would change if the MBB firms were to go down?
@DrEhrfurchtgebietend6 ай бұрын
That will not happen but BCG might overtake McK. QB produces low quality output relative to BCGx.
@jasxteo6 ай бұрын
Yes I wish for the day when consulting firms are gone. Personally see two companies ruined by McKinsey
@DrEhrfurchtgebietend6 ай бұрын
@@jasxteo McKinsey is the worst of the three. If it is finance you want Bain. If it is strategy or data science you want BCG
@sunnohh6 ай бұрын
@@DrEhrfurchtgebietenddatascience is just lying with computer math and strategy is what a business should already understand
@dqz65916 ай бұрын
You should do a video on how many more women are given opportunities to progress than men. DEI quotas hurt people at MBB.
@joshwright36836 ай бұрын
Do not underestimate the uptake of AI in those firms creating efficiencies that require fewer consultants, coupled with governments spending less.
@CaseInterviewHub6 ай бұрын
All these firms are definitely working on improving their interntal as well as external AI capabilities. If you are interested, we discussed what the latest AI tool at McKinsey is capable of in this video: kzbin.info/www/bejne/gaC0kKafg7KBmc0
@andyf13336 ай бұрын
I have been running different firms as head of business for over two decades; responsible for P&L, sales and marketing etc.. With all due respect I can’t see how someone who graduated from good business schools but never having a real life work / corp experiences can be given such high regard.. know someone who’s head for Mck & Co who had never managed a real biz before, makes no sense to me 😂
@salamattolegen5666 ай бұрын
they higher professionals with industry experience too, don't they? those who join with no experience but with diplomas then learn from those who have experience.
@dn80155 ай бұрын
The crisis is that people think that these businesses do anything useful.
@EcomCarl6 ай бұрын
The consulting industry's current challenges highlight the importance of adaptability and resilience. As the industry navigates this downturn, young consultants can focus on upskilling and building a strong professional network to stay competitive in the evolving landscape. 💼
@guillaumegeaymond5033 ай бұрын
You said the only difference between a junior and senior consultant is proficiency in Excel and PowerPoint with utmost seriousness. I appreciate the honesty, I guess
@CaseInterviewHub3 ай бұрын
If you mean the section at 5:53, then we suggest you listen to it again. We mentioned PowerPoint, Excel, Project Management, and Client Interaction. This was just to give some flavor, we could have added to this list (e.g., comprehension skills ;)
@ViceCoinАй бұрын
Consult on mass layoffs. After the end of Cold war aerospace careers, I spent most of my life in temp and contract jobs, in 100+ companies.
@bandofbrothers586029 күн бұрын
so for 2025 we might actually face an undersupply and get a better chance than last year?
@lolzorkont6 ай бұрын
Here in the Netherlands more and more companies are starting internal strategy teams. I work in one myself at a major foodretailer. This seems to be a trend at least in the Netherlands. You see this anywhere else or does this just catch my eye more often now since I switched from agency to client strategy?
@sagara16096 ай бұрын
yes, that happens when there is enough aggregate demand for consultancy within a firm...I have usually seen it happen with large banks and public sector here in Canada. It is not a new trend.
@spaghettiravioli14706 ай бұрын
It's more of a corporate level trend than geography. Seeing it in my industry for the MNCs. Makes sense since in-house team is much cheaper, greater accountability and keep talent and knowledge within the company. Any knowledge gap can be bridged by tapping on internal experts (in MNCs you ought to find someone who has the functional knowledge)
@lolzorkont6 ай бұрын
@@sagara1609 Aight, yeah here in NL its the larger corporates that start strategy teams lately. I like this trend since it give the opportunity to switch industry after a while. At an agency I felt like I was not really a part of the succes. Even though I had good impact. Rather build on the succes for one company for a longer time.
@lolzorkont6 ай бұрын
@@spaghettiravioli1470 fully agree. They do pay well, but McKinsey etc. pays better.
@kiranteegala6 ай бұрын
Do you see a possibility of companies hiring from other companies from around the globe at a cheaper cost, high quality resources? especially from smaller firms??
@HigorAmorim-eh9rr7 ай бұрын
Hello, do you use a market tool to build your videos? Seems really cool to use on corporate presentations as well.
@CaseInterviewHub7 ай бұрын
It's a mix between PowerPoint, Keynote, and Final Cut Pro. We are sure video editing pros will have more tips regarding tools as we are just a bunch of MBB consultants playing around with video editing. Hope this helps anyway.
@tifta78906 ай бұрын
MBB Consultants should have created a strategy for this crisis prevention, in a way that they shouldn't do what they aren't supposed to do.. I don't know how, but they're pretty good at it, aren't they?
@vikasverma76676 ай бұрын
Shouldnt it be bench not beach?😅
@CaseInterviewHub6 ай бұрын
We had this discussion somewhere in the comments :)
@zomgoose23 күн бұрын
Companies have less money for external entities to create PowerPoint presentations for outsourced accountability.
@flyingtin6 ай бұрын
Do you see AI reducing the demand for consulting firms?
@CaseInterviewHub6 ай бұрын
Not really. We’ve discussed this here: kzbin.info/www/bejne/gaC0kKafg7KBmc0
@Ayeltahlawy6 ай бұрын
Maybe their HR team should hire their own people to work on their dilemma.
@bfshorts64436 ай бұрын
Can anyone share a consulting toolkit, their entire template and workflow? Seems they are best able to tie up all the expert knowledge and experience and then present them well
@sachit23946 ай бұрын
Great video. Super accurate and realistic.
@punchtalestudio6 ай бұрын
Covid didn’t curtail Mc Kinsey growth in France. On the contrary. They made millions as guns hired by the French gouvernement to define the restriction policies. The nudge technic worked pretty well, thank you. So it’s always a question of perspective
@MrAbstractj7 ай бұрын
Remove MBB Consultants and insert any tech job titles other than the CEO, there you have the state of the current tech industry.
@Jacosmi6 ай бұрын
Some roles are more at risk than others. To some extent, many technical roles will be more secure than BS “project management roles” with no skills, or HR admins.
@Sam-jy5tj5 ай бұрын
Imagine how much more productive our economies wud be if all the talent sucked up by these industries were actually producing something? Engineers, scientists, software developers etc. Here’s the answer CEO who is incompetent and “consults” his way out of it. Make 10-15% of your workforce redundant. That’s for free and the answer they will give you without the £300k fee.
@funnelhacking6 ай бұрын
Job cuts in every sector that chatgpt and AI can affect
@ghg27689gf6 ай бұрын
Strategy consultants develop strategy for their clients. Fortune 1000, small companies, Non Profits, Govts. you name it. But these strategy consultants do not have any strategy for their own Consulting businesses.
@Phlegethon2 ай бұрын
Consulting firms that use to only hire from the top schools ended up hiring anyone with a pulse
@the_real_swiper5 ай бұрын
Just call a consult.
@Legenerale696 ай бұрын
Good.
@Goosalkhaana4 ай бұрын
UCall is coming a new startup which provides in hand consultation and in hand services ASAP at cheap & affordable rates
@InesElm-dj9tn6 ай бұрын
CONSULTING WILL GO BUST IT GROW BASED ON HYPE NOW COMPANIES WILL DOWNSIZE
@1101G126466 ай бұрын
I mean, isn't this the reality for pretty much ALL industries?
@InesElm-dj9tn6 ай бұрын
CONSULTING IS BULLSHIT INDUSTRY 😂😂😂😂😂
@LaitoChen7 ай бұрын
Shed a tear for the McKenzie boys and their Porsches and Manhattan apartments. These are Cinderella laptop jobs. Cry me a river LMAO. If Your 6 figure job gets axed during a recession you have a vanity job.
@CaseInterviewHub7 ай бұрын
We’re glad that your fragile ego feels a little better now. The juniors who’s jobs are on the line are by the way not the ones with a Porsche and a Manhattan apartment. If you want to know more about the salary, check out our video: kzbin.info/www/bejne/hGKqiWuodtGHirs
@wolfumz7 ай бұрын
@@CaseInterviewHub consulting is a trip, because from what I've seen, half of the time, consultants give really bad advice, and the consultants do not possess the necessary competencies to meaningfully help. I work in software and engineering, I've seen this happen now multiple times in my career. Consultant is hired, who does not understand the profit center of your business, much less the salient details of your industry, or what's going on technically. Consulting firm promises the world to Management. Consultant's suggestions appear to be a mix of very creative rent seeking, and suggestions to manage your business more like a financial firm. Career engineers and PMs balk. Management is in thrall to the consultant. Career engineers warn management that surreptitiously strip mining your own workforce/customer base/assets/product for value could cause reputational harm, or poses a risk to the companies core service/product. People have real concerns that the consultants promises about financialization are as not nearly as low risk as they say. Management does what the consultant says anway. The company then makes big money in the next year or two, by stripping out wealth/value from somewhere in the system, and funneling it up. However, the company suffers costs along the way, costs the consultant either glossed over or totally neglected, that end up harming the companies' ability to make a profit. In some cases, it's years later before all the negative consequences of that consultants plan actually roll in. I found myself, years after the super genius consultant had advised us to gut our workforce and burn our government agency clients, taking minutes for a meeting with regional managers and VP's. They were literally wondering aloud why none of our clients want to work with them anymore, why they have lost all their key staff, and how these slam-dunk prestige projects are losing so much money. But by then, the consultant, and the manager who used them, are long gone. They left, and they got a promotion while they were at it. The Boeing-fication of the engineering industry. I saw this happen when I was at a medium sized supplier in aviation, I saw it happen at a fortune 100 engineering firm in their structural engineering/public works dept, and I saw it again when I was doing staff augmentation contracting for a big defense firm. And I'm still a ways off from retirement. I am expecting to see at least one more consultant destroy a successful business, before I retire.
6 ай бұрын
but muh added value 😢
@alixm44906 ай бұрын
You have no idea how things really work, do you?
@sjg98876 ай бұрын
Even at a minimum wage these consultants would be overpaid.
@InesElm-dj9tn6 ай бұрын
Consulting is BS industry 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@Haoren855 ай бұрын
Consulting is a form of insult in corporate setting.
@dhenier46522 ай бұрын
Out with the high paid older workers in with the cheaper young ones.
@Omnamahshivay80796 ай бұрын
The economic slump or the anticipation of it has already driven corporations to be very cautious of big risky projects. Those that are rolling out , the top bosses are ever more reluctant to get consulting agencies on it , as theyd rather prefer having their own people or hire core sme on their payrolls. The effectiveness of using any of the big 3 have always been questioned. However, more so especially after the covid hit and in the first quarter of 2024. Its also a matter of time when consultants would really be relevant, if AI develops to an extent where itll be able to work faster and cheaper for those management solutions .
@Discovering_world-jj1yj6 ай бұрын
I believe that consulting will be still relevant in the sense of bringing more expertise about certain topic. But the general business bs and nice slides not anymore.
6 ай бұрын
Nothing's more useless than a consultant. Got invited to interview after I graduated. The little ecosystem game was cool and all, but just actually read into it and fuck no. They can keep their buzzwords and shitty deck pitches. Now I'm in tech as data engineer, was hard to get into as an economist but all good now rhankfully
@CaseInterviewHub6 ай бұрын
There’s at least one thing more useless than a consultant: a non-consultant watching a video about consultants and then showing off his ignorance in the comments ;) Oh, and if you wanna pass the interview next time around, check our website for useful resources (www.caseinterviewhub.com)
You seem to have a deep understanding of the business. You must’ve watched many consulting memes
@Antowan6 ай бұрын
@CaseInterviewHub i dont get how everyone is just blaming AI when many of the laid off workers found work in other corporations and the job market is still hot. I agree with you this is a reaction of a natural higher inflation rate environment. Companies are higher but keeping capital expenditure low.
@gregorylu6 ай бұрын
@@CaseInterviewHubconsultants that have no real industry experience are completely worthless. Aka the fresh grads who go straight into a firm.
@CoolGendut6 ай бұрын
Pretty much what happened in Capgemini for the past 3 years
@01sevensix6 ай бұрын
An oversupply of consultants!
@sunnohh6 ай бұрын
My fortune 500 company keeps hiring brain dead consultants so I think the business of telling companies what everyone else is doing will be fine
@dontreadmyprofilepicture63466 ай бұрын
How to start in the consulting space
@CaseInterviewHub5 ай бұрын
Well, that's a really broad question. Before you apply you should definitely get your CV in order. We have a dedicated video on that (kzbin.info/www/bejne/n3OaiYSelqZ1massi=JSqtFXS-j-Sd4Et1). If you then get invited you should prepare yourself for the case interview. We have a whole video series dedicated to how to pass the case interview (kzbin.info/www/bejne/sHulm3xsZbGYmc0si=fpcqoCxUNQ-7ph6O). If you have have any more specific questions, we are happy to help :)
@aoncars6 ай бұрын
Not for all. Deloitte is recruiting strong
@CaseInterviewHub5 ай бұрын
Which region are you referring to? There are many recent reports (e.g., www.businessinsider.com/consultancy-firms-ey-deloitte-lay-off-underemployed-staff-report-2024-2) that Deloitte is laying off staff and also reorganizing its structure (www.fnlondon.com/articles/what-deloittes-overhaul-means-for-the-big-four-the-job-cuts-are-coming-20240321). Happy to hear more about your perspective on that.
@romanbaier88835 ай бұрын
Before this video I've worked over 5 years in similar consultancy software companies and I've never heard "on the beach" for people temporarily without a project, it's always "on the bench" (just like in sports, while other players are in a game, there's also a substitution bench), my US colleagues use "on the bench", my EU colleagues use "on the bench", and it's weird to hear "beach" in the same situation
@ViceCoinАй бұрын
Consultants can become solo operators.
@blazkowicz6666 ай бұрын
Pretty useless profession, hard to understand what sort of value they provide to society.
@InesElm-dj9tn6 ай бұрын
EXACTLY 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 THEY ARE JUST BULLSHITING THESE COMPANIES
@steveyv9635 ай бұрын
The engineering consulting firms my organization hires are expensive and provide low value for the price.
@rodrigoslc814 ай бұрын
Consultoria estratégica é serviço caro e pouco útil. Não entendo porque empresas pagam tão caro por isso.
@312squadron6 ай бұрын
By the way it’s called “bench” not “beach” 😂 otherwise video is solid work
@CaseInterviewHub6 ай бұрын
We’ve discussed this already several times in the comments here, you can refer to those discussions 😊
@marialeonorcobo89626 ай бұрын
Great video
@peterhannl78346 ай бұрын
Boss bist du österreichisch?
@chinaman16 ай бұрын
There are a lot of consultants who work from home and play video games all day. Only work when they they have to but makes big bucks and behaves like ass holes.
@Asurahah6 ай бұрын
Consulting is the most useless and shit stuff in this world, totally useless and scam
@The14119915 ай бұрын
I have no idea what you guys are saying but this voice is hella sexy
@agpc052928 күн бұрын
Consultants are generally incompetent
@CaseInterviewHub28 күн бұрын
Great take. Much intelligent
@augustuswade97815 ай бұрын
Commercial consulting is a scam
@mayurbhaskar15076 ай бұрын
Bench*
@西恩-g4i6 ай бұрын
LMAO McKinsey need consultation 😂😂
@dipro0017 ай бұрын
So.. you mean AI eating jobs? What else is new?
@CaseInterviewHub7 ай бұрын
It’s more of a general economic slowdown coupled with uncertainty in the markets. AI will not fundamentally change consulting, and we have an entire video on this topic: kzbin.info/www/bejne/gaC0kKafg7KBmc0
@dipro0017 ай бұрын
@@CaseInterviewHub Past economic slowdowns did not look like this. No top executive will admit to firing because of AI so "economic downturn" is the perfect excuse. Look into it a bit further. You will find content for another video.
@CaseInterviewHub7 ай бұрын
Talking about the economy as a whole: Why wouldn’t executives admit to downsizing because of AI? That seems to be something many CEOs would be extremely proud of. Deploying cutting edge technology at scale, thereby increasing shareholder value…that’s a story that most management teams would love to be able to tell. It’s just that they can’t because so many established companies can’t even upgrade their legacy IT, much less become an AI champion. You hear the buzzword a lot, but very few companies actually figure it out. It remains to be seen if GenAI really leads to massive shifts in the market, or if it turns into an „overhyped game changer“ (like VR/AR, or blockchain). Right now there are some cool use cases, but it’s still not at that point where it makes entire job categories obsolete.
@antman76737 ай бұрын
@@CaseInterviewHub I am a computer science student. -Just working on a bachelor of science degree. (I don’t claim to hold any authority on the subject) Still in my opinion, generative AI, is like an Industrial Revolution. I have been using ChatGPT for 1-2 hours daily since launch. I use GitHub copilot. I try to come up with ways to use the API. From my standpoint this technology is even underhyped. It can be easily integrated. From my experience it just works. There is a lot of stuff, that you could currently create with it. There is even more stuff in the future. Whatever money I spend on it, probably has a really good return. Never liked crypto. VR will work eventually.
@antman76737 ай бұрын
@@CaseInterviewHub There are different phases to the current developments: 2022 -ChatGPT was successful 2023 -huge investment followed -some new applications 2024 -models get huge 2025 -energy problems -generated movies -companies get more efficient -potentially automated bureaucracy(good regulations with fast response) -maybe personal au media -automated scientific research -maybe a chance to develop technology to fight climate change (scientists and engineers in a can) There is no unrealistic promise in these guesses. Those scenarios sound realistic and scientifically grounded. No „to the moon“ and other dumb quotes.
@anyoneanyone286 ай бұрын
“I’ve never seen a management consulting report that didn’t recommend more management consulting” - Charlie Munger
@CaseInterviewHub5 ай бұрын
That is actually a very good point. During projects, it is rarely the case that you actively address the follow up project. But at the end of projects, you highlight the open pain points and ideally a plethora of next steps so that the client is inclined to work with you on a follow up project or just extend the current one.
@NancyClark-d5h29 күн бұрын
Hall Mary Lee Jessica Davis Daniel
@benjaminphilips37376 ай бұрын
Blabblablablabla, not even touched the point. ........is it not because we have ChatGPT, so we don't need so many consultants for brainstorm anymore?
@CaseInterviewHub6 ай бұрын
Maybe you’re not clear on the day to day job of a consultant and you can find more info in other videos on our channel. But we also discussed the specific impact of GenAI here: GenAI: The End of Consulting? (feat. Lilli by McKinsey) kzbin.info/www/bejne/gaC0kKafg7KBmc0
@okok-uc8hi7 ай бұрын
The bench* not the beach
@CaseInterviewHub7 ай бұрын
Both terms exist, but we encounter beach more frequently
@bosenasam507 ай бұрын
My company says bench and I have never hated a word so much. When i was starting i was on the bench for 4 months.
@vg80627 ай бұрын
Bench is the correct term, it comes from soccer, when you don't actually get to play but have to sit on the bench. Beach is not an analogy and if you're hearing it a lot, most likely spread by mistake.
@okok-uc8hi7 ай бұрын
@@CaseInterviewHub definitely depends on where you encounter it but most consultants say bench. I was one of
@CaseInterviewHub7 ай бұрын
In all my years at McKinsey I've never personally heard bench. Every single person there, from juniors to partners to PD manager called it beach. Only once someone said bench. It was a guy who switched over from a Big 4. He quickly stopped. It's clear where the bench analogy comes from. But whatever the reason, beach seems to be more commonly used. It could be a regional thing, but even a bit of googling makes it seem beach is more common. Maybe we should make a video about this...
@huidezhu75666 ай бұрын
consultants are useless
@pacoceja46596 ай бұрын
This guys voice is like a SLEEPING PILL! I almost fell asleep… I forgot I was trying to watch this video. Monotone voice 👎🏼
@CaseInterviewHub6 ай бұрын
That's the voice you need to be a good CEO whisperer ;)