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How Real Leaders Hire Consultants

Hire The Right Consultant Correctly To Achieve The Outcome You Want.

Hiring Consultants = Weakness?

n

My social circles do not afford opportunity to attend many black-tie events, but I do own a tuxedo. u00a0So, even though I thought it pretentious, I attended my thirtieth LBS reunion formal dress dinner in the Kent castle.

n

u201cBoards are simply intolerable.u201d

n

A tight circle formed around Mike, our only a public company CEO classmate. My class had mostly gone into finance, so Mike was surrounded by ten retired investment bankers who chimed in as Mike lamented the inefficacy of Boards of Directors. I joined the group.

n

u201cu201cPeople arrive late or come unprepared.u201d u201cEveryone talks at once.u201d u201cThey think they are there to make decisions, when they are there to advise and consent.u201d u201cIu2019m the only one who understands the issues, but still everyone has an opinion.u201d u201cMeetings go on forever.u201d

n

I spoke up. u201cIt sounds like a meeting that might benefit from third party design and facilitation.u201d

n

Heads snapped toward me followed by a three second stunned silence and many frowns..

n

u201cOf course youu2019d think that as a consultantu201d sneeredu00a0 my u201cfriendu201d Rob, a retired business professor, now an u201cinvestor.u201d

n

Vigorous consultant-bashing ensued.

n

u201cConsultants know nothing. u201cTheyu2019re arrogant. u201c u201cThey destroy morale.u201d u201cConsultants find any negative information and paint a picture of doom.u201d u00a0u201cThey always want to sell you something more expensive. u201cThey use their Board contacts to make you look bad.u201d u201cTheir recommendations are either nau00efve, or destructive.u201d

n

Finally Mike raised his voice. u201cOnly weak leaders hire consultants.u201d

n

u201cIu2019m not sure that my clients would agree with you, Mike.u201d I said, but soon went to look for another conversation and the group went comfortably back to complaining about directors, regulators, and environmentalists.

n

I retired from consulting after thirty-seven years and I admit that some complaints about consultants are justified. Some consultants sell by fear. Some are arrogant and demean staff. The percentage of jerks in the profession is smaller than reported but larger than it should be.

n

Some leaders hire the wrong consultants or hire them for the wrong reason. The u201cweaku201d characterization is unfair, but few in leadership talk about why to hire a consultant.

n

Why leaders hire consultants u2013 the rational case.

n

A leader might need expertise, to understand circumstances not faced before. The leader may need specialized knowledge and skill it doesnu2019t make sense to hire full time. A leader might just want experienced heads and hands to help his company through a rough period of change. Or he or she might believe that the organization could use a partner to teach them how to master skills they not needed in the past but required now.

n

Those are u201cprocess needs,u201d describing how the leader works with the consultant and the first indicator of the kind of consultant the leader wants to hire:

n

    n

  • An expert u2013 who provides answers.
  • n

  • A trained resource – who alleviates a staffing crunch
  • n

  • A partner, collaborator, who works with you to solve a problem and implement a solution.
  • n

n

Sometimes a leader starts with the kind of help they want. Many times they start with a problem or an unspecified awareness that something needs to change.

n

There are only three u201cproblemsu201d – reasons to hire a consultant. These are desired outcomes (mostly); we need to:

n

    n

  • Grow revenue
  • n

  • Grow profit, or
  • n

  • Resolve u201cpeople stuffu201d
  • n

n

What about strategy, supply chain optimization, digital transformation?u201d Strategy, innovation, product design, marketing, sales systems projects bring in more customers or more revenue from existing customers. Supply change optimization, inventory management, process improvement, operational systems projects reduce cost and increase profit.

n

Not all leaders naturally think in outcome terms. If they did there wouldnu2019t be a category called u201cpeople stuff.u201d An organization design reduces cost (increasing profit) or specifies accountability for customer acquisition or retention (growing revenue). Compensation and benefits work, or union employee grievance reduction would be a way to reduce the cost of hiring and managing staff. But in my experience, leaders with a people problem often donu2019t think about it in economic outcome terms. u201cPeople stuffu201d is messy, emotional, uncomfortable for many executives.

n

Consultants think in terms of service offerings and the academic press has trained leaders to think this way. u201cI need a continuous improvement initiativeu201d or u201cBlue Ocean Strategy, or Digital Transformation.u201d So, many consulting engagements have process deliverables disconnected from results.

n

The leader has to achieve those results. If you hire an expert for the solution, youu2019ll have to implement it. If you hire u201ctrained resourcesu201d youu2019ll have to manage them to the outcome. Even if you hire a collaborator, the leader u201cownsu201d the outcome.

n

This is the rational case, but business decisions have more than just the rational. There is often u201cbehind the scenes people stuff,u201d which influences hiring a consultant,

n

Behind the scenes people stuff.

n

u201cMy boss told me to,u201d u201cthe Board strongly suggested it,u201d u201cthere are two distinct factions on this issue,u201d u201cthe last time we attempted this we crashed and burned,u201d u201cwe have a young team with u00a0little credibility with senior management,u201d or u201ceveryone is complacent, itu2019s time to u2018shake things upu2019 a bit.u201d

n

Are any of these issues driving your decision to hire a consultant?

n

    n

  • Resolve an internal dispute? or
  • n

  • Avoid a mistake? or
  • n

  • Grow internal capability? or
  • n

  • Build internal credibility? or
  • n

  • u201cShake things up?u201d
  • n

n

If so, refocus on outcomes. These are real issues and a leader must resolve them, but they shouldnu2019t be the only reason you hire a consultant.

n

Why leaders shouldnu2019t hire consultants.

n

Donu2019t engage a consultant to do the leaderu2019s job or to outsource a core business process.

n

Iu2019ve seen this happen with u201cpeople stuffu201d projects. Consultants evaluate and coach poor performers outsourcing performance management responsibilities. Sometimes a consultant decides who to let go during downsizing.

n

Some leaders hire consultants for the same work repeatedly – a new strategy or a new organization every two years. Bring those skills inhouse. Likewise, some companies try multiple continuous improvement or innovation initiatives, using a new methodology each time; Pick one methodology and stick with it.

n

Donu2019t hire a consultant to find a solution you wonu2019t implement.

n

This often happens when a company hires a consultant to resolve a dispute the leader has a strong view about. The consultant comes up with the opposite answer and the report is buried. Sometimes this leader was directed to hire a consultant or is too busy to engage in the project

n

There are leaders who hire a consultant and u201cdelegateu201d the entire relationship to a junior person, never seeing the consultant again until the report is presented. In my view, this is not delegation but rather abdication, and wonu2019t produce lasting results. A successful consulting project is determined by the engagement of the leader in the work. Donu2019t u201cbuy a dog and then bark yourselfu201d as the Cockneys say, but you should u201cnever let go of the leash.u201d

n

Donu2019t buy the latest management fad

n

Some executives want bragging rights at the Round Table or country club. u201cWe use Six Sigma.u201d Sometimes they say, u201cit is good to u201cshake things upu201d every now and then. Their people say u201cOh, here comes the flavor-of-the-month.u201d

n

Donu2019t hire your friend

n

A consultant-client relationship is based upon trust, reliable information, respected judgement, and a track record of doing what is promised. A leader must hire a u201ctruth teller,u201d a person who can deliver bad news without giving offence, but without concern for a personal relationship.

n

Hire a consultant with a plan to leave. Disengagement with a consultant friend is hard because of the personal relationship. Even non-friend consultants want endless extensions, expansions, and an impressive rebuy rate. A disengagement plan should include how you will deliver results and learning the skills to do this yourself.

n

How a real leader hires consultants.

n

I think of consulting as a u201chelping profession.u201du00a0 So in the spirit of being helpful, donu2019t hire a consultant without thoroughly thinking through these ideas:

n

    n

  • Be very clear about why you are hiring the consultant:n
      n

    • What are your expected outcomes? What action will you take? (Who might take it and when?)
    • n

    • If there are u201cbehind the scenes people stuffu201d reasons you are hiring a consultant, donu2019t let those cloud expected outcomes.
    • n

    • What role do you expect from the consultant: expert, extra resource, partner?
    • n

    n

  • n

  • Be open with your consultant about the answers to these questions.
  • n

  • Have a plan to bring the consultantu2019s process inhouse:n
      n

    • What can you learn?
    • n

    • Who should learn it?
    • n

    • What will they do with this new knowledge?
    • n

    n

  • n

  • Hire a consultant with a plan to disengage.
  • n

  • Roll up your sleeves and engage with the consultant yourself. If you donu2019t have the time to do this, delegate, but make sure this person engages and arranges for you to interact (and not just at the final presentation).
  • n

  • Resist the u201cpitch for additional worku201d that comes at the end of most project presentations, at least until you have achieved the planned results.
  • n

n

This requires the engagement of the leader. Consulting firms often say there is one client. There is also one person who is the consultant. Yes, there is a team on both sides, but in each case one person is the leader and accountable for outcomes. Many corporations have a staff person send out a boilerplate request for proposal (RFP) to twenty firms and then have the short list of five come in for u201cbake-offu201d presentations. This common consulting purchase process obscures the leader to consultant contract and makes success more difficult..

n

In my experience, real leaders, know why they are hiring a consultant and are intimately involved with the decision.

“,”tablet”:”

Hiring Consultants = Weakness?

n

My social circles do not afford opportunity to attend many black-tie events, but I do own a tuxedo. So, even though I thought it pretentious, I attended my thirtieth LBS reunion formal dress dinner in the Kent castle.

n

u201cBoards are simply intolerable.u201d

n

A tight circle formed around Mike, our only a public company CEO classmate. My class had mostly gone into finance, so Mike was surrounded by ten retired investment bankers who chimed in as Mike lamented the inefficacy of Boards of Directors. I joined the group.

n

u201cu201cPeople arrive late or come unprepared.u201d u201cEveryone talks at once.u201d u201cThey think they are there to make decisions, when they are there to advise and consent.u201d u201cIu2019m the only one who understands the issues, but still everyone has an opinion.u201d u201cMeetings go on forever.u201d

n

I spoke up. u201cIt sounds like a meeting that might benefit from third party design and facilitation.u201d

n

Heads snapped toward me followed by a three second stunned silence and many frowns..

n

u201cOf course youu2019d think that as a consultantu201d sneered my u201cfriendu201d Rob, a retired business professor, now an u201cinvestor.u201d

n

Vigorous consultant-bashing ensued.

n

u201cConsultants know nothing. u201cTheyu2019re arrogant. u201c u201cThey destroy morale.u201d u201cConsultants find any negative information and paint a picture of doom.u201d u201cThey always want to sell you something more expensive. u201cThey use their Board contacts to make you look bad.u201d u201cTheir recommendations are either nau00efve, or destructive.u201d

n

Finally Mike raised his voice. u201cOnly weak leaders hire consultants.u201d

n

u201cIu2019m not sure that my clients would agree with you, Mike.u201d I said, but soon went to look for another conversation and the group went comfortably back to complaining about directors, regulators, and environmentalists.

n

I retired from consulting after thirty-seven years and I admit that some complaints about consultants are justified. Some consultants sell by fear. Some are arrogant and demean staff. The percentage of jerks in the profession is smaller than reported but larger than it should be.

n

Some leaders hire the wrong consultants or hire them for the wrong reason. The u201cweaku201d characterization is unfair, but few in leadership talk about why to hire a consultant.

n

Why leaders hire consultants u2013 the rational case.

n

A leader might need expertise, to understand circumstances not faced before. The leader may need specialized knowledge and skill it doesnu2019t make sense to hire full time. A leader might just want experienced heads and hands to help his company through a rough period of change. Or he or she might believe that the organization could use a partner to teach them how to master skills they not needed in the past but required now.

n

Those are u201cprocess needs,u201d describing how the leader works with the consultant and the first indicator of the kind of consultant the leader wants to hire:

n

    n

  • An expert u2013 who provides answers.
  • n

  • A trained resource – who alleviates a staffing crunch
  • n

  • A partner, collaborator, who works with you to solve a problem and implement a solution.
  • n

n

Sometimes a leader starts with the kind of help they want. Many times they start with a problem or an unspecified awareness that something needs to change.

n

There are only three u201cproblemsu201d – reasons to hire a consultant. These are desired outcomes (mostly); we need to:

n

    n

  • Grow revenue
  • n

  • Grow profit, or
  • n

  • Resolve u201cpeople stuffu201d
  • n

n

What about strategy, supply chain optimization, digital transformation?u201d Strategy, innovation, product design, marketing, sales systems projects bring in more customers or more revenue from existing customers. Supply change optimization, inventory management, process improvement, operational systems projects reduce cost and increase profit.

n

Not all leaders naturally think in outcome terms. If they did there wouldnu2019t be a category called u201cpeople stuff.u201d An organization design reduces cost (increasing profit) or specifies accountability for customer acquisition or retention (growing revenue). Compensation and benefits work, or union employee grievance reduction would be a way to reduce the cost of hiring and managing staff. But in my experience, leaders with a people problem often donu2019t think about it in economic outcome terms. u201cPeople stuffu201d is messy, emotional, uncomfortable for many executives.

n

Consultants think in terms of service offerings and the academic press has trained leaders to think this way. u201cI need a continuous improvement initiativeu201d or u201cBlue Ocean Strategy, or Digital Transformation.u201d So, many consulting engagements have process deliverables disconnected from results.

n

The leader has to achieve those results. If you hire an expert for the solution, youu2019ll have to implement it. If you hire u201ctrained resourcesu201d youu2019ll have to manage them to the outcome. Even if you hire a collaborator, the leader u201cownsu201d the outcome.

n

This is the rational case, but business decisions have more than just the rational. There is often u201cbehind the scenes people stuff,u201d which influences hiring a consultant,

n

Behind the scenes people stuff.

n

u201cMy boss told me to,u201d u201cthe Board strongly suggested it,u201d u201cthere are two distinct factions on this issue,u201d u201cthe last time we attempted this we crashed and burned,u201d u201cwe have a young team with little credibility with senior management,u201d or u201ceveryone is complacent, itu2019s time to u2018shake things upu2019 a bit.u201d

n

Are any of these issues driving your decision to hire a consultant?

n

    n

  • Resolve an internal dispute? or
  • n

  • Avoid a mistake? or
  • n

  • Grow internal capability? or
  • n

  • Build internal credibility? or
  • n

  • u201cShake things up?u201d
  • n

n

If so, refocus on outcomes. These are real issues and a leader must resolve them, but they shouldnu2019t be the only reason you hire a consultant.

n

Why leaders shouldnu2019t hire consultants.

n

Donu2019t engage a consultant to do the leaderu2019s job or to outsource a core business process.

n

Iu2019ve seen this happen with u201cpeople stuffu201d projects. Consultants evaluate and coach poor performers outsourcing performance management responsibilities. Sometimes a consultant decides who to let go during downsizing.

n

Some leaders hire consultants for the same work repeatedly – a new strategy or a new organization every two years. Bring those skills inhouse. Likewise, some companies try multiple continuous improvement or innovation initiatives, using a new methodology each time; Pick one methodology and stick with it.

n

Donu2019t hire a consultant to find a solution you wonu2019t implement.

n

This often happens when a company hires a consultant to resolve a dispute the leader has a strong view about. The consultant comes up with the opposite answer and the report is buried. Sometimes this leader was directed to hire a consultant or is too busy to engage in the project

n

There are leaders who hire a consultant and u201cdelegateu201d the entire relationship to a junior person, never seeing the consultant again until the report is presented. In my view, this is not delegation but rather abdication, and wonu2019t produce lasting results. A successful consulting project is determined by the engagement of the leader in the work. Donu2019t u201cbuy a dog and then bark yourselfu201d as the Cockneys say, but you should u201cnever let go of the leash.u201d

n

Donu2019t buy the latest management fad

n

Some executives want bragging rights at the Round Table or country club. u201cWe use Six Sigma.u201d Sometimes they say, u201cit is good to u201cshake things upu201d every now and then. Their people say u201cOh, here comes the flavor-of-the-month.u201d

n

Donu2019t hire your friend

n

A consultant-client relationship is based upon trust, reliable information, respected judgement, and a track record of doing what is promised. A leader must hire a u201ctruth teller,u201d a person who can deliver bad news without giving offence, but without concern for a personal relationship.

n

Hire a consultant with a plan to leave. Disengagement with a consultant friend is hard because of the personal relationship. Even non-friend consultants want endless extensions, expansions, and an impressive rebuy rate. A disengagement plan should include how you will deliver results and learning the skills to do this yourself.

n

How a real leader hires consultants.

n

I think of consulting as a u201chelping profession.u201d So in the spirit of being helpful, donu2019t hire a consultant without thoroughly thinking through these ideas:

n

    n

  • Be very clear about why you are hiring the consultant:n
      n

    • What are your expected outcomes? What action will you take? (Who might take it and when?)
    • n

    • If there are u201cbehind the scenes people stuffu201d reasons you are hiring a consultant, donu2019t let those cloud expected outcomes.
    • n

    • What role do you expect from the consultant: expert, extra resource, partner?
    • n

    n

  • n

  • Be open with your consultant about the answers to these questions.
  • n

  • Have a plan to bring the consultantu2019s process inhouse:n
      n

    • What can you learn?
    • n

    • Who should learn it?
    • n

    • What will they do with this new knowledge?
    • n

    n

  • n

  • Hire a consultant with a plan to disengage.
  • n

  • Roll up your sleeves and engage with the consultant yourself. If you donu2019t have the time to do this, delegate, but make sure this person engages and arranges for you to interact (and not just at the final presentation).
  • n

  • Resist the u201cpitch for additional worku201d that comes at the end of most project presentations, at least until you have achieved the planned results.
  • n

n

This requires the engagement of the leader. Consulting firms often say there is one client. There is also one person who is the consultant. Yes, there is a team on both sides, but in each case one person is the leader and accountable for outcomes. Many corporations have a staff person send out a boilerplate request for proposal (RFP) to twenty firms and then have the short list of five come in for u201cbake-offu201d presentations. This common consulting purchase process obscures the leader to consultant contract and makes success more difficult..

n

In my experience, real leaders, know why they are hiring a consultant and are intimately involved with the decision.

“,”phone”:”

Hiring Consultants = Weakness?

n

n

My social circles do not afford opportunity to attend many black-tie events, but I do own a tuxedo. So, even though I thought it pretentious, I attended my thirtieth LBS reunion formal dress dinner in the Kent castle.

n

u201cBoards are simply intolerable.u201d

n

A tight circle formed around Mike, our only a public company CEO classmate. My class had mostly gone into finance, so Mike was surrounded by ten retired investment bankers who chimed in as Mike lamented the inefficacy of Boards of Directors. I joined the group.

n

u201cu201cPeople arrive late or come unprepared.u201d u201cEveryone talks at once.u201d u201cThey think they are there to make decisions, when they are there to advise and consent.u201d u201cIu2019m the only one who understands the issues, but still everyone has an opinion.u201d u201cMeetings go on forever.u201d

n

I spoke up. u201cIt sounds like a meeting that might benefit from third party design and facilitation.u201d

n

Heads snapped toward me followed by a three second stunned silence and many frowns..

n

u201cOf course youu2019d think that as a consultantu201d sneered my u201cfriendu201d Rob, a retired business professor, now an u201cinvestor.u201d

n

Vigorous consultant-bashing ensued.

n

u201cConsultants know nothing. u201cTheyu2019re arrogant. u201c u201cThey destroy morale.u201d u201cConsultants find any negative information and paint a picture of doom.u201d u201cThey always want to sell you something more expensive. u201cThey use their Board contacts to make you look bad.u201d u201cTheir recommendations are either nau00efve, or destructive.u201d

n

Finally Mike raised his voice. u201cOnly weak leaders hire consultants.u201d

n

u201cIu2019m not sure that my clients would agree with you, Mike.u201d I said, but soon went to look for another conversation and the group went comfortably back to complaining about directors, regulators, and environmentalists.

n

I retired from consulting after thirty-seven years and I admit that some complaints about consultants are justified. Some consultants sell by fear. Some are arrogant and demean staff. The percentage of jerks in the profession is smaller than reported but larger than it should be.

n

Some leaders hire the wrong consultants or hire them for the wrong reason. The u201cweaku201d characterization is unfair, but few in leadership talk about why to hire a consultant.

n

Why leaders hire consultants u2013 the rational case.

n

n

A leader might need expertise, to understand circumstances not faced before. The leader may need specialized knowledge and skill it doesnu2019t make sense to hire full time. A leader might just want experienced heads and hands to help his company through a rough period of change. Or he or she might believe that the organization could use a partner to teach them how to master skills they not needed in the past but required now.

n

Those are u201cprocess needs,u201d describing how the leader works with the consultant and the first indicator of the kind of consultant the leader wants to hire:

n

    n

  • An expert u2013 who provides answers.
  • n

  • A trained resource – who alleviates a staffing crunch
  • n

  • A partner, collaborator, who works with you to solve a problem and implement a solution.
  • n

n

Sometimes a leader starts with the kind of help they want. Many times they start with a problem or an unspecified awareness that something needs to change.

n

There are only three u201cproblemsu201d – reasons to hire a consultant. These are desired outcomes (mostly); we need to:

n

    n

  • Grow revenue
  • n

  • Grow profit, or
  • n

  • Resolve u201cpeople stuffu201d
  • n

n

What about strategy, supply chain optimization, digital transformation?u201d Strategy, innovation, product design, marketing, sales systems projects bring in more customers or more revenue from existing customers. Supply change optimization, inventory management, process improvement, operational systems projects reduce cost and increase profit.

n

Not all leaders naturally think in outcome terms. If they did there wouldnu2019t be a category called u201cpeople stuff.u201d An organization design reduces cost (increasing profit) or specifies accountability for customer acquisition or retention (growing revenue). Compensation and benefits work, or union employee grievance reduction would be a way to reduce the cost of hiring and managing staff. But in my experience, leaders with a people problem often donu2019t think about it in economic outcome terms. u201cPeople stuffu201d is messy, emotional, uncomfortable for many executives.

n

Consultants think in terms of service offerings and the academic press has trained leaders to think this way. u201cI need a continuous improvement initiativeu201d or u201cBlue Ocean Strategy, or Digital Transformation.u201d So, many consulting engagements have process deliverables disconnected from results.

n

The leader has to achieve those results. If you hire an expert for the solution, youu2019ll have to implement it. If you hire u201ctrained resourcesu201d youu2019ll have to manage them to the outcome. Even if you hire a collaborator, the leader u201cownsu201d the outcome.

n

This is the rational case, but business decisions have more than just the rational. There is often u201cbehind the scenes people stuff,u201d which influences hiring a consultant,

n

Behind the scenes people stuff.

n

n

u201cMy boss told me to,u201d u201cthe Board strongly suggested it,u201d u201cthere are two distinct factions on this issue,u201d u201cthe last time we attempted this we crashed and burned,u201d u201cwe have a young team with little credibility with senior management,u201d or u201ceveryone is complacent, itu2019s time to u2018shake things upu2019 a bit.u201d

n

Are any of these issues driving your decision to hire a consultant?

n

    n

  • Resolve an internal dispute? or
  • n

  • Avoid a mistake? or
  • n

  • Grow internal capability? or
  • n

  • Build internal credibility? or
  • n

  • u201cShake things up?u201d
  • n

n

If so, refocus on outcomes. These are real issues and a leader must resolve them, but they shouldnu2019t be the only reason you hire a consultant.

n

Why leaders shouldnu2019t hire consultants.

n

n

Donu2019t engage a consultant to do the leaderu2019s job or to outsource a core business process.

n

Iu2019ve seen this happen with u201cpeople stuffu201d projects. Consultants evaluate and coach poor performers outsourcing performance management responsibilities. Sometimes a consultant decides who to let go during downsizing.

n

Some leaders hire consultants for the same work repeatedly – a new strategy or a new organization every two years. Bring those skills inhouse. Likewise, some companies try multiple continuous improvement or innovation initiatives, using a new methodology each time; Pick one methodology and stick with it.

n

Donu2019t hire a consultant to find a solution you wonu2019t implement.

n

This often happens when a company hires a consultant to resolve a dispute the leader has a strong view about. The consultant comes up with the opposite answer and the report is buried. Sometimes this leader was directed to hire a consultant or is too busy to engage in the project

n

There are leaders who hire a consultant and u201cdelegateu201d the entire relationship to a junior person, never seeing the consultant again until the report is presented. In my view, this is not delegation but rather abdication, and wonu2019t produce lasting results. A successful consulting project is determined by the engagement of the leader in the work. Donu2019t u201cbuy a dog and then bark yourselfu201d as the Cockneys say, but you should u201cnever let go of the leash.u201d

n

Donu2019t buy the latest management fad

n

Some executives want bragging rights at the Round Table or country club. u201cWe use Six Sigma.u201d Sometimes they say, u201cit is good to u201cshake things upu201d every now and then. Their people say u201cOh, here comes the flavor-of-the-month.u201d

n

Donu2019t hire your friend

n

A consultant-client relationship is based upon trust, reliable information, respected judgement, and a track record of doing what is promised. A leader must hire a u201ctruth teller,u201d a person who can deliver bad news without giving offence, but without concern for a personal relationship.

n

Hire a consultant with a plan to leave. Disengagement with a consultant friend is hard because of the personal relationship. Even non-friend consultants want endless extensions, expansions, and an impressive rebuy rate. A disengagement plan should include how you will deliver results and learning the skills to do this yourself.

n

How a real leader hires consultants.

n

n

I think of consulting as a u201chelping profession.u201d So in the spirit of being helpful, donu2019t hire a consultant without thoroughly thinking through these ideas:

n

    n

  • Be very clear about why you are hiring the consultant:n
      n

    • What are your expected outcomes? What action will you take? (Who might take it and when?)
    • n

    • If there are u201cbehind the scenes people stuffu201d reasons you are hiring a consultant, donu2019t let those cloud expected outcomes.
    • n

    • What role do you expect from the consultant: expert, extra resource, partner?
    • n

    n

  • n

  • Be open with your consultant about the answers to these questions.
  • n

  • Have a plan to bring the consultantu2019s process inhouse:n
      n

    • What can you learn?
    • n

    • Who should learn it?
    • n

    • What will they do with this new knowledge?
    • n

    n

  • n

  • Hire a consultant with a plan to disengage.
  • n

  • Roll up your sleeves and engage with the consultant yourself. If you donu2019t have the time to do this, delegate, but make sure this person engages and arranges for you to interact (and not just at the final presentation).
  • n

  • Resist the u201cpitch for additional worku201d that comes at the end of most project presentations, at least until you have achieved the planned results.
  • n

n

This requires the engagement of the leader. Consulting firms often say there is one client. There is also one person who is the consultant. Yes, there is a team on both sides, but in each case one person is the leader and accountable for outcomes. Many corporations have a staff person send out a boilerplate request for proposal (RFP) to twenty firms and then have the short list of five come in for u201cbake-offu201d presentations. This common consulting purchase process obscures the leader to consultant contract and makes success more difficult..

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In my experience, real leaders, know why they are hiring a consultant and are intimately involved with the decision.

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Hiring Consultants = Weakness?

My social circles do not afford opportunity to attend many black-tie events, but I do own a tuxedo.  So, even though I thought it pretentious, I attended my thirtieth LBS reunion formal dress dinner in the Kent castle.

“Boards are simply intolerable.”

A tight circle formed around Mike, our only a public company CEO classmate. My class had mostly gone into finance, so Mike was surrounded by ten retired investment bankers who chimed in as Mike lamented the inefficacy of Boards of Directors. I joined the group.

““People arrive late or come unprepared.” “Everyone talks at once.” “They think they are there to make decisions, when they are there to advise and consent.” “I’m the only one who understands the issues, but still everyone has an opinion.” “Meetings go on forever.”

I spoke up. “It sounds like a meeting that might benefit from third party design and facilitation.”

Heads snapped toward me followed by a three second stunned silence and many frowns..

“Of course you’d think that as a consultant” sneered  my “friend” Rob, a retired business professor, now an “investor.”

Vigorous consultant-bashing ensued.

“Consultants know nothing. “They’re arrogant. “ “They destroy morale.” “Consultants find any negative information and paint a picture of doom.”  “They always want to sell you something more expensive. “They use their Board contacts to make you look bad.” “Their recommendations are either naïve, or destructive.”

Finally Mike raised his voice. “Only weak leaders hire consultants.”

“I’m not sure that my clients would agree with you, Mike.” I said, but soon went to look for another conversation and the group went comfortably back to complaining about directors, regulators, and environmentalists.

I retired from consulting after thirty-seven years and I admit that some complaints about consultants are justified. Some consultants sell by fear. Some are arrogant and demean staff. The percentage of jerks in the profession is smaller than reported but larger than it should be.

Some leaders hire the wrong consultants or hire them for the wrong reason. The “weak” characterization is unfair, but few in leadership talk about why to hire a consultant.

Why leaders hire consultants – the rational case.

A leader might need expertise, to understand circumstances not faced before. The leader may need specialized knowledge and skill it doesn’t make sense to hire full time. A leader might just want experienced heads and hands to help his company through a rough period of change. Or he or she might believe that the organization could use a partner to teach them how to master skills they not needed in the past but required now.

Those are “process needs,” describing how the leader works with the consultant and the first indicator of the kind of consultant the leader wants to hire:

  • An expert – who provides answers.
  • A trained resource – who alleviates a staffing crunch
  • A partner, collaborator, who works with you to solve a problem and implement a solution.

Sometimes a leader starts with the kind of help they want. Many times they start with a problem or an unspecified awareness that something needs to change.

There are only three “problems” – reasons to hire a consultant. These are desired outcomes (mostly); we need to:

  • Grow revenue
  • Grow profit, or
  • Resolve “people stuff”

What about strategy, supply chain optimization, digital transformation?” Strategy, innovation, product design, marketing, sales systems projects bring in more customers or more revenue from existing customers. Supply change optimization, inventory management, process improvement, operational systems projects reduce cost and increase profit.

Not all leaders naturally think in outcome terms. If they did there wouldn’t be a category called “people stuff.” An organization design reduces cost (increasing profit) or specifies accountability for customer acquisition or retention (growing revenue). Compensation and benefits work, or union employee grievance reduction would be a way to reduce the cost of hiring and managing staff. But in my experience, leaders with a people problem often don’t think about it in economic outcome terms. “People stuff” is messy, emotional, uncomfortable for many executives.

Consultants think in terms of service offerings and the academic press has trained leaders to think this way. “I need a continuous improvement initiative” or “Blue Ocean Strategy, or Digital Transformation.” So, many consulting engagements have process deliverables disconnected from results.

The leader has to achieve those results. If you hire an expert for the solution, you’ll have to implement it. If you hire “trained resources” you’ll have to manage them to the outcome. Even if you hire a collaborator, the leader “owns” the outcome.

This is the rational case, but business decisions have more than just the rational. There is often “behind the scenes people stuff,” which influences hiring a consultant,

Behind the scenes people stuff.

“My boss told me to,” “the Board strongly suggested it,” “there are two distinct factions on this issue,” “the last time we attempted this we crashed and burned,” “we have a young team with  little credibility with senior management,” or “everyone is complacent, it’s time to ‘shake things up’ a bit.”

Are any of these issues driving your decision to hire a consultant?

  • Resolve an internal dispute? or
  • Avoid a mistake? or
  • Grow internal capability? or
  • Build internal credibility? or
  • “Shake things up?”

If so, refocus on outcomes. These are real issues and a leader must resolve them, but they shouldn’t be the only reason you hire a consultant.

Why leaders shouldn’t hire consultants.

Don’t engage a consultant to do the leader’s job or to outsource a core business process.

I’ve seen this happen with “people stuff” projects. Consultants evaluate and coach poor performers outsourcing performance management responsibilities. Sometimes a consultant decides who to let go during downsizing.

Some leaders hire consultants for the same work repeatedly – a new strategy or a new organization every two years. Bring those skills inhouse. Likewise, some companies try multiple continuous improvement or innovation initiatives, using a new methodology each time; Pick one methodology and stick with it.

Don’t hire a consultant to find a solution you won’t implement.

This often happens when a company hires a consultant to resolve a dispute the leader has a strong view about. The consultant comes up with the opposite answer and the report is buried. Sometimes this leader was directed to hire a consultant or is too busy to engage in the project

There are leaders who hire a consultant and “delegate” the entire relationship to a junior person, never seeing the consultant again until the report is presented. In my view, this is not delegation but rather abdication, and won’t produce lasting results. A successful consulting project is determined by the engagement of the leader in the work. Don’t “buy a dog and then bark yourself” as the Cockneys say, but you should “never let go of the leash.”

Don’t buy the latest management fad

Some executives want bragging rights at the Round Table or country club. “We use Six Sigma.” Sometimes they say, “it is good to “shake things up” every now and then. Their people say “Oh, here comes the flavor-of-the-month.”

Don’t hire your friend

A consultant-client relationship is based upon trust, reliable information, respected judgement, and a track record of doing what is promised. A leader must hire a “truth teller,” a person who can deliver bad news without giving offence, but without concern for a personal relationship.

Hire a consultant with a plan to leave. Disengagement with a consultant friend is hard because of the personal relationship. Even non-friend consultants want endless extensions, expansions, and an impressive rebuy rate. A disengagement plan should include how you will deliver results and learning the skills to do this yourself.

How a real leader hires consultants.

I think of consulting as a “helping profession.”  So in the spirit of being helpful, don’t hire a consultant without thoroughly thinking through these ideas:

  • Be very clear about why you are hiring the consultant:
    • What are your expected outcomes? What action will you take? (Who might take it and when?)
    • If there are “behind the scenes people stuff” reasons you are hiring a consultant, don’t let those cloud expected outcomes.
    • What role do you expect from the consultant: expert, extra resource, partner?
  • Be open with your consultant about the answers to these questions.
  • Have a plan to bring the consultant’s process inhouse:
    • What can you learn?
    • Who should learn it?
    • What will they do with this new knowledge?
  • Hire a consultant with a plan to disengage.
  • Roll up your sleeves and engage with the consultant yourself. If you don’t have the time to do this, delegate, but make sure this person engages and arranges for you to interact (and not just at the final presentation).
  • Resist the “pitch for additional work” that comes at the end of most project presentations, at least until you have achieved the planned results.

This requires the engagement of the leader. Consulting firms often say there is one client. There is also one person who is the consultant. Yes, there is a team on both sides, but in each case one person is the leader and accountable for outcomes. Many corporations have a staff person send out a boilerplate request for proposal (RFP) to twenty firms and then have the short list of five come in for “bake-off” presentations. This common consulting purchase process obscures the leader to consultant contract and makes success more difficult..

In my experience, real leaders, know why they are hiring a consultant and are intimately involved with the decision.

The post How Real Leaders Hire Consultants appeared first on Wisdom from Unusual Places.

Originally Published on https://wisdomfromunusualplaces.com/blog/

Alan Cay Culler Writer of Stories and Songs

I'm a writer.

Writing is my fourth career -actor, celebrity speakers booking agent, change consultant - and now writer.
I write stories about my experiences and what I've learned- in consulting for consultants, about change for leaders, and just working, loving and living wisely.

To be clear, I'm more wiseacre than wise man, but I'm at the front end of the Baby Boom so I've had a lot of opportunity to make mistakes. I made more than my share and even learned from some of them, so now I write them down in hopes that someone else might not have to make the same mistakes.

I have also made a habit of talking with ordinary people who have on occasion shared extraordinary wisdom.

Much of what I write about has to do with business because I was a strategic change consultant for thirty-seven years. My bias is that business is about people - called customers, staff, suppliers, shareholders or the community, but all human beings with hopes, and dreams, thoughts and emotions.. They didn't teach me that at the London Business School, nor even at Columbia University's Principles of Organization Development. I learned that first in my theater undergraduate degree, while observing people in order to portray a character.

Now I'm writing these observations in stories, shared here for other Baby Boomers and those who want to read about us.

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