At What Point Should Consultants Make Recommendations to Clients?

I run into a lot of folks who use the term "management consulting" a lot more loosely than I would use the term. I often run into people who say things like:

"You should just go in there and start telling them what to do – go and consult."

"Go and give them your advice."

"I can do consulting. I can give them my expert advice."

"So you tell them how to start wireless businesses?"

Although I’ve not described the context for these statements fully, these types of statements make me cringe. Why? Because people who say these things often presume that consultants start dispensing advice without understanding and gathering an inventory of a client’s situation.

In some circumstances, maybe the consultant can jump right in to start making recommendations. For example, if a client is simply missing some basic fundamentals, e.g., sales or operational reports, written contracts, one can dispense some "advice" from the start. But I tend to caution giving advice so early in a consulting relationship. I tend to prefer to share perspectives as well as the factors or things I would need to investigate to either confirm or alter my initial read of the situation. This communicates to the client that I am not in the business of dispensing shallow advice. It also sets the frame for the consulting methodology that I am going to use to solve the problem at hand.

Now provided that a consultant is going to use a structured methodology for solving a client problem, at what point does the consultant make recommendations to the client? My timing preference is based on the fact that clients ultimately have to live with proposed solutions. As such, I prefer the recommendation process to be more iterative. For example, on one project I may have to first gather competitive marketing information about mobile operators and benchmark my client against those competitors. The next step may be for me to outline the options that the client has to pursue to close the gaps (say increase efficiency of distribution points versus increase number and type of distribution points) along with the tradeoffs. As the final step, the client and I jointly work to decide the best path. By involving the client in the recommendations process, the client takes more ownership of the solution, and hence, the solution will tend to stick better.

There is second school of thought on how to time recommendations to clients. Rather than the process being iterative, the thinking is that if the client is a large Fortune 100/Tier 1 ranking/etc. client that the consulting style should be more iterative. For smaller clients, e.g., middle-market/Tier 2 ranking/etc. companies, the thinking is that a consultant should take a stronger up-front stance on making recommendations and skipping a lot of the client facilitation and decision-making process.

I can see some benefits to the strong up-front approach as opposed to the iterative process:

  • consultant takes more control by initiative
  • smaller companies do not have as many resources as larger companies and need consultants to service as "interim managers" and not just as facilitators
  • consultant may leave a stronger impression with the client by being strong up-front

As a consultant, what method do you use? If you are a client, what method do you prefer?

5 Replies to “At What Point Should Consultants Make Recommendations to Clients?”

  1. Good post Steve, I have been in consulting for about 2 years now and primarily work with family firms trying to professionalise in a growth environment. Even in a scenario , where the basics are missing, a structured approach, with a broad view of the options and where ones solution is headed is a good approach. Understanding the practical difficulties, separating the wheat from the chaff of client personnel reasons for non acceptance and final solution design is a thing i would use. In cases where I am involved in operational improvement projects, a small controlled experiment in the form of a pilot helps, before final closure.

  2. Deepak,
    Thanks for the comments. Sounds like you a doing pretty well and working an interesting market space. You make an excellent point about using pilots and controlled experiments as part of operational improvement projects. Some client engagements don’t always allow for this opportnity, and some consulting firms try not to enter these waters for strategic reasons. That said, my personal preference is to get involved in pilot and rollout incubation wherever possible. Results become very tangible at that phase of a project.

  3. Steve,

    To me the nature of the business problem is a more important factor than the characteristics of the client organization.

    I am sure we can all cite examples of consultants who have produced a voluminous analysis to support a decision that should have been obvious at the outset. This does not provide client value.

    Equally, we have likely all seen shallow analysis and a rush to judgment where a more rigorous and thoughtful approach was required — and would have led to a very different outcome.

    Either can occur when working with any size of client organization (although client culture can certainly be a contributing factor to either one of these errors).

    I would suggest that keeping the client engaged in the analysis process and informed of current thinking is smart in any circumstance.

    Combine this with a keen eye on the rationale for performing each additional stage of data gathering and analysis. If you cant explain how the information you are gathering might alter the final direction, the analysis likely is unnecessary.

  4. Steve,

    Its a really great thing that you have pointed out but in the case of some small scale businesses that I have been consulting for a while now the general tendency of the client is that they want me to give some pointers or like ideas from the beginning itself. And in the due course of the understanding and analysis of their businesses some really simple mistakes do pop out but what I worry about is that if I start giving out suggestions in the beginning itself, it may not be good for a long term association with the client so I prefer to state the observations and describe the systems as they are in an aptly titled Observations Report.

    1. Hi Rohan,

      That sounds like reasonable approach. I think framing things as off-the-cuff ideas, potential pointers, initial impressions, and observations can work. The human dynamic of consulting plays an important role, so if the client wants some thoughts early on, it is totally reasonable to provide early thoughts with the proper caveats.

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