The big-firm consulting model is under pressure.
Clients are savvier and more selective, growth is harder to come by, and, yes, software is replacing much of the low- and mid-level work that used to keep the large firms’ engines running.
In response, consultancies are shifting. Strategy shops are moving downstream into implementation. Tech consultancies are pushing upstream into advisory. Everyone is converging toward the middle and starting to sound the same.
This is leading to a crisis of differentiation. In part because offerings become even more similar, in part because the knee-jerk response of many players is to lean even harder into “capability-selling”: service portfolios expand, offering lists grow, everybody “leverages AI” and has their own proprietary chatbot.
But that no longer builds trust or wins business. It pushes firms into a spiral of race-to-the-bottom commoditization, with some clients already asking for AI-driven discounts.
It’s crystal-clear that something will have to give. And we’re convinced it's not consulting itself (as we’ve pointed out here), but the capacity- and investment model of large, broadly positioned consulting firms.
Because we think that in today's market, a true edge won’t come from a firm's brand, bench, or talent alone, but from the clarity of its proposition.
Because it – and only it – will make a difference in winning better work from better clients, winning the best talent for a consulting firm’s specific business, and building truly differentiating IP while the middle of the market collapses.
In this article, we provide our step-by-step breakdown of why the model is crumbling and how large firms can respond.
For decades, large consulting firms grew on the back of a simple formula:
That model worked well. Until it didn’t.
Today:
All of this to say that the traditional firm structure of big teams, broad offerings, and a generalist growth playbook is out of sync with modern market dynamics. And the cracks are showing.
Recommended reading: AI Is Not Destroying Consulting. It’s Raising the Bar.
In our work with large consulting firms, we see the same pattern repeating: high capability, weak proposition.
Instead of showing how they help clients solve specific, high-stakes issues, many firms default to showcasing scale:
“We have 75 consultants in 12 jurisdictions for this practice.”
That’s capability-selling, and it quietly kills differentiation, commercial clarity, and pricing power. It also creates three major risks:
“We help clients achieve growth and transformation”
“We bring deep industry expertise”
Generic claims make even the most powerful firms sound like their smaller peers. Buyers tune out. They gravitate toward firms that articulate a real point of view, with a sharp focus on a pressing problem they recognise.
Listing services isn’t the same as showing relevance. When firms lead with capabilities instead of problems solved, buyers are forced to guess whether and how those capabilities apply to their situation.
In a competitive market, clients won’t waste time making that mental leap. They will simply move on.
Without a clear proposition, firms chase scattered opportunities. They spin up new offerings to chase deals, expand into sectors with no clear advantage, and create layers of messaging that don’t add up.
The result? Confused marketing, siloed teams, fragile margins, and burned-out talent stretched across too many priorities.
To thrive in today’s market, large consultancies need to move from capability-selling to proposition-selling:
In our work with large, multi-service consulting firms, we prioritise helping them make three key shifts:
Every firm needs a unifying narrative – a clear story about who they serve, what they solve, and why clients should trust them.
In large consultancies, this story often gets diluted across siloed practices. That’s why it’s essential to:
Recommended reading: How to Structure Multiple Value Propositions Without Losing Your Firm’s Identity
Sometimes the service portfolio itself becomes the problem.
Legacy offerings, misaligned acquisitions, and opportunistic expansions often create drag on clarity. That’s why we often help firms:
We aren’t talking about just editing a service list. It’s about refocusing the firm’s operating model around its strategic edge.
Each service line should operate like a boutique consultancy within the broader firm, with its own defined audience, issue focus, success journey, and outcome promise.
When this happens:
Here’s what a strong, issue-led proposition unlocks:
Recommended reading: The Ultimate Guide to Consulting Value Proposition Design
In our experience, consulting firms that take on this journey typically go through three stages of commercial maturity:
Before the redesigned overarching proposition and optimised service lines can have any impact externally, they must take root internally. That means marketing teams need to re-think their strategies, consulting teams need to internalise the new messaging and start reframing their conversations with clients, team leaders need to adjust how they manage their teams, recruit new talent, and communicate across departments.
That’s why, at this stage, the main outcomes are:
Now that internal changes are more or less settled in, consulting firms can expect to see some external results. It’s becoming less of a struggle to attract and convert the right prospects, marketing messages are receiving stronger engagement, and consulting teams don’t find themselves struggling to justify the prices as much.
Some of the most visible indicators in this phase are:
Phase 1 is about bringing internal changes, Phase 2 is about testing out these changes externally to collect proof, and Phase 3 is about scaling. Now that it is evident that the new system is working, consulting firms can start taking advantage of the firm-wide sales power, where it is no longer up to a couple of rainmakers to bring in the clients. Individual consultants, marketing executives, senior leaders – everyone is communicating a unified narrative.
That’s why at this stage, consulting firms typically experience:
The impact of AI goes beyond changing how consulting is delivered. It’s forcing firms to rethink what they are.
In a world where talent is no longer scarce and clients have near-perfect information, the real differentiator isn’t the size of a consulting firm or its slides.
It’s the proposition.
Because without a clear, focused, and credible proposition, talent can’t thrive, buyers don’t care, and growth doesn’t scale.
Capability-selling builds complexity. Proposition-selling builds commercial strength. The firms that embrace this shift will define the next era of consulting.
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