Something is quietly shifting in this corner of the consulting industry – and it’s not just about margins or market share. It’s about experience. Or rather, the growing recognition that experience isn’t just an asset, it’s the very foundation of value creation.
For decades, the traditional consulting model has resembled a pyramid: at the base, a legion of bright but inexperienced analysts. At the top, a handful of seasoned partners who rarely deliver the work themselves. This model is efficient – at least for the firms – but increasingly, it feels out of step with client expectations.
Today, CFOs and finance departments are asking a different set of questions. Not “which firm should we hire?” but “who will actually be doing the work?”
Because when it comes to bringing in external support to work with valuable data or make changes to the processes and workflows that keep the finance engine running, there is little room for trial and error. Experience – hands-on, field-tested, pattern-recognising experience – is no longer a nice-to-have. It’s a requirement.
