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This list includes notable management consulting firms. Management consulting indicates both the industry of, and the practice of, helping organizations improve their performance, primarily through the analysis of existing business problems and development of plans for improvement.
Each of them had more than U.S. $450 million in estimated revenues, and more than 300 consultants. [1] [2] Forbes partnered with market research company Statista to determine an annual ranking of America’s best executive recruiting firms—the top 150 executive search firms specialized in filling positions with salaries of at least $100,000. [3]
The Big Three or MBB is the name colloquially given to the three largest strategy consulting firms. They are considered to be the most prestigious firms in the management consulting industry. [1] In terms of employees, McKinsey & Company is the largest and leads by revenue. McKinsey is followed by Boston Consulting Group and Bain & Company ...
Strategy consulting firms of the United States (5 P) Pages in category "Management consulting firms of the United States" The following 65 pages are in this category, out of 65 total.
Political consulting firms (1 C, 10 P) S. Security consulting firms (28 P) Strategy consulting firms (1 C, 8 P) ... Code of Conduct; Developers; Statistics; Cookie ...
Kearney is an American global management consulting firm with offices in more than 40 countries worldwide. [1] Kearney's predecessor firm was founded in Chicago by James O. McKinsey in 1926; he hired Andrew Thomas "Tom" Kearney as his first partner in 1929. After James McKinsey died in 1937, the Chicago office split into its own company, led by ...
Between 2010 and 2015, the 10 largest consulting firms alone made 170 billion dollars growth revenue and the average annual growth rate is around 4%. According to The Economist, the industry’s most important firms are the "Great eight" consulting firms which consist of Bain, BCG, McKinsey, Deloitte, EY, KPMG, PwC and Accenture. [1]
The management consulting firms Stern Stewart, [12] Marakon Associates, [13] [14] and Alcar pioneered value-based management (VBM), or "managing for value", in the 1980s based on the academic work of Joel Stern, Bill Alberts, and Professor Alfred Rappaport. [15] Other consulting firms including McKinsey and BCG developed VBM approaches. [13]