Most of the time, consulting leaders reach out to me because their firms are experiencing problems: their business growth has stalled, or they keep having to offer discounts to win projects, or they find themselves going through tedious client recruitment processes.
However, I also spend much time talking to firms that do not need my help. They are hugely successful – they have high profits, their consultants are known as trusted experts, they have low consultant turnover, etc.
I love listening to the stories that leaders in these consulting firms share. It’s an opportunity for me to continuously study and benchmark their financial performance.
In this article, I’d like to share a story of a mid-size consulting firm I got in touch with not too long ago. Let’s call it Consultancy X.
This firm’s annual revenue per full-time employee is 2-3X the market average. They constantly turn away requests from prospects because they do not fit their narrowly defined area of expertise. In fact, there is a waitlist for Consultancy X’s services. It sounds like a dream, right? Well, suffice it to say that they do not need my help.
The reason I’m sharing their story? Because 'the secret' to their success is not some superhuman abilities or an immense amount of luck. It’s a straightforward strategy that any consulting firm can adopt and adapt to its context.
Let me share a few details about this particular consulting firm:
It’s a truly inspiring case! By any standard, this is a high-performance consultancy.
Their project pricing and margins are insane, their employees do not feel pressured to win new business no matter what it takes, and their consultants are widely respected for their deep expertise.
This consultancy achieves such spectacular results because at its foundation is strong positioning that determines all their actions: whom they work with, what projects they take on, how they hire, how they market – everything!
Here are the foundational elements that Consultancy X is doing right (and that other consultancies can replicate).
“Give people an abundance of confidence in your expertise by creating an abundance of value and share it again and again”. (Seth Godin)
“The more irrelevant you become to non-ideal prospects by turning your positioning away from them, the more relevant you become to your chosen target clients”. (David C. Baker)
“Our 60% gross margin target isn’t that difficult to achieve, after all. As long as we keep our narrow focus, repeating similar projects with similar type clients, reducing the variability in process and outcomes, we can remain extremely efficient. (The owner of Consultancy X)
The owner of consultancy X receives acquisition requests from big consultancy firms at least once per month. Based on everything I’ve shared in this article about their positioning and results, I suppose that shouldn’t come as a surprise.
Recommended reading: [Case Study] Why Offering Too Many Services Destroyed This Boutique Consultancy
I know that Consultancy X sounds too good to be true. But that’s because I shared this firm’s journey's results and their laser-sharp positioning – high profits, stable existing clients, a steady flow of new clients (no outreach at all), low team turnover, etc.
Getting there requires courage and much determination. Only some have the guts to do that. They put all their eggs in one basket and stayed true to that vision despite others warning them of the risks, despite the temptation to get distracted by quick wins, and despite taking time to build up the visibility they currently enjoy. They clearly defined and stayed true to their positioning.
This consultancy was able to grow – both in terms of its size and its profits – because the owner had the unwavering belief in what I call ‘the glorious loop to heaven’:
It takes focus, specialization, and authority to stand out in an crowded, highly competitive consulting market with risk-avoiding, impatient buyers who can find anything in seconds. I keep telling my clients: your (focused) competitor is only one click away.
Recommended reading: (Case Study) How This Consultancy Cut Back 30% of Its Services Yet Improved Profitability
It’s possible to ‘blindly read’ a consultancy P&L in the context of positioning, narrow focus, specialization, and value delivery. I’ve done it many times.
Without knowing anything about the consultancy, margins of the well-positioned, narrowly focused, and deeply specialized consulting firm are (with very few exceptions) substantially higher than consultancies trying to be everything to everyone.
The latter consultancies believe that opening their arms wide to everyone can get more business. Unfortunately, consultancies cannot be successful by targeting multiple expertise domains, keeping the options open to protect short-term revenue!
Because of immense competition, there’s too much saturation and too many competitors doing the same thing. It’s a losing battle in profit levels because these ‘jack-of-all-trades’ consultancies are playing in the low-level rate game, beaten up by procurement.
In my experience, if a consultancy hasn’t achieved an irresistible go-to expert positioning in its market, the overall project margins are between ⅓ or even ½ lower than the expert firm high in demand.
As Florian M. Heinrichs, Founder and CEO of 'Client Friendly', points out in the comments section of my LinkedIn post on this subject, the benchmark gross margins for the industry are currently at around 54% based on CSIMarket data – “a number far, far above what "not-so-in-demand" consultancies can reach”.
That’s because of high-in-demand consultancies:
That’s easy to ‘discover’ in a P&L.
Profit is the ‘side-effect’ of this high-performance consultancy’s rock-solid positioning. They stay in their lane. Always.
Sure, it’s easy now when clients are knocking on their doors with all sorts of questions. But starting out it meant passing on lucrative projects to stay on course. And that’s why many consultancies choose not to go this route. And that’s why they don’t win big. They just stay afloat.
It’s time for boutique consultancies to face up to the harsh reality. Firms cannot be everything to everyone and hope to be successful.
Trying to target multiple expertise domains (or audiences or industries) will only lead boutique consultancies down a path of mediocrity and considerable profit erosion.
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