Typical characteristics of consulting work in front and behind the wall
1. Characteristics of the project work ‘in front of the wall’
● Lower value work
● Lower pricing, mostly hourly billing
● Output-driven
● Client in the lead
● Selling activities, time/hours as the measure
● Lower average project revenue
● Lead generation pressure (selling a lot of smaller projects to hit revenue targets)
● (lower) Manager-level connection
2. Characteristics of consulting work ‘behind the wall’
● Higher value work (e.g., strategic advisory)
● Premium pricing, more often some form of value pricing
● Outcome-driven
● Expert in the lead
● Selling impact, transformation results as the measure
● Higher average assignment revenue
● Concentration pressure (risk of a few big clients driving all the revenue)
● C-level connection
If you are familiar with Geoffrey Moore’s book ‘Crossing The Chasm’, the chasm stands for ‘the wall’ in my sketch below. His definition of ‘the chasm’: reaching a plateau and struggling to move to the next level.
When I talk to the consulting firms struggling with ‘the wall’ (or ‘the chasm’), most of them have the ambition to get over the wall but don’t know how to start that journey. I’ve been there, got that t-shirt.
Here’s my advice to cross the project wall in consulting
During the workshop, we discussed these two relatively easy ways to help get over the wall.
1. Develop a discovery audit
The discovery audit helps companies understand their improvement opportunities in a specific (strategic) domain, e.g., supply chain inventory improvements, cyber security risk analysis, data analysis feasibility study, etc.
The delivery ‘product’ is a roadmap with a summary of the improvement areas and the recommendations for improvement. Based on your internal capacity (people), you can decide (reverse-engineer) how much of such a roadmap you can implement with your consulting firm.
It’s your Trojan Horse to move upstream with your consulting work. I know several consulting firms that do most of their new client work with these audits and get both roadmap implementation and strategic advisory work as an outcome of such an audit.
Recommend reading: I wrote a detailed article on how to develop discovery audits
2. Develop a ‘building the function’ value proposition
Most consulting firms don’t have a specific value proposition to help organizations ‘build the function’ (or improve, which can also be included in the discovery audit).
An example from my consulting days in People Analytics (PA): the PA discipline (and function) used to be in the early stages of maturity in most companies between 2010 and 2018. We've helped many organizations with establishing the PA function, solving all kinds of questions related to:
- the structure of the function
- the business case to build the function
- the needed expertise
- the role/job descriptions
- the functional objectives (and challenges)
- the hiring of the team
- the training
- the collaboration with the data center
- the data governance, and much more.
It took me a while to understand the power of such work in moving upstream and crossing the project wall. I’d say: reflect on this. It’s an ideal ‘breaking through the wall’ proposition.
My final advice: watch out for moving upstream as a project consulting firm
The perception of your consulting firm as a project or services-first firm is difficult to change. It’s not easy to move upstream if you have been doing project work in an organization for a long time. And going for premium pricing after years of lower-level project pricing could cause a few stupefied client faces.
My advice will always be to first test and develop the ‘crossing the wall’ with new clients.
Need advice to move upstream with your consulting firm? Drop me a mail via info@thevisibleauthority.com.