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4#
发表于 2011-10-5 14:06
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I guess what you have to do is look to see how they performed before hiring consultants and afterwards. Do they underperform less afterwards than before? Did they underperform and now they look like they are performing in line or perhaps outperforming. How do they compare to other underperformers who did not get any consulting?
Are you talking about corporate strategy people, like McKinsey & Co., who consult on how to improve the process of creating goods and services and marketing them to people, or are you talking about investment consulting, like Mercer, or Russel Reynolds, who advise about asset allocation and fund manager selection?
Assuming you are talking about the investment consultants, I think there is an innate problem with looking at "Top 4" (whoever they are). Presumably, to be in the top 4, you need to have the largest investors with the greatest amount of capital using your services, or else you wouldn't be "Top." If that's the case, it is probably very difficult for these guys to outperform, because they compose so much of the market that they would move the market itself upwards if they outperformed, and they just can't outperform themselves. The liquidity problems involved in managing large funds are huge too. Institutions can't just trade in and out...basically they need to build positions over time and increase them or decrease them.
Consulting firms can help identify 1) key problems you might not otherwise notice, and 2) possible ways to address those problems (whether you knew about them before or not). They can also help you learn from the experience of other firms, so that something a typical firm might do once in a while can be handled with the knowledge of people who have done it many many times, and therefore are less likely to make "newbie" mistakes.
The challenge with consulting firms is that in the marketing side of stuff, they need to project the image of being cutting-edge and forward thinking, which by definition means that they want to recommend at least some stuff that hasn't been tried before. It's still useful to use consultants for helping to manage change, because they may identify a number of issues that are change-related that ordinary people might not have thought of, but there is a very strong incentive for them to project a greater degree of expertise and confidence than is in fact warranted. |
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