Shifting Sands


Changing market paradigms prompt foreign consultancy firms to change tack in China
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With a massive push among Chinese companies to go global, Western consultancy firms have started to realize that battle plans need to be changed in China and more help sought from bases back home to help Chinese companies understand exactly how the West works.
"More and more Chinese companies are going in for premium consultancy services, especially from international consultancies, as they need to professionalize," says Christoph Nettesheim, senior partner and managing director of the Boston Consulting Group, Greater China, the longest operating international consulting group in China.
While five to 10 years ago BCG's clients were predominantly international companies looking for ways to tap China's potential, it has now been replaced by an increasing number of domestic companies bolstering efforts to operate on global standards.
"I would not say it's a shift, I would use a slightly different word. It is an addition to the existing market," Nettesheim says, adding that international companies still account for a significant portion of the consulting clientele.
Regardless of how it is labeled, the newfound patronage has provided a beacon of hope for an industry that just three years ago suffered one of its biggest hits in more than a decade. In the UK alone consultants suffered more than a 7 percent loss in revenues and 13 percent loss of jobs in 2009, according to a report from the Management Consultancy Agency.
While the market has since stabilized, China is proving an invaluable area of expansion for most of the large consulting firms.
According to a report released by IBIS World, a business research firm, management consulting in China has enjoyed an annualized growth rate of more than 10 percent, though the premium segment enjoyed slightly higher growth rates of 15 to 20 percent, a robust performance compared with the single-digit growth in the US and Europe.
"It's the kind of growth our US colleagues would dream of," says Nigel Knight, managing partner of Ernst & Young, Greater China.
Driving the double-digit growth rates for the industry is also the government encouragement for companies to actively shore up knowledge of international business practices.
"A majority of Chinese companies are still at an early stage on the road," Zhao Qizheng, head of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, told reporters during the annual session of the CPPCC earlier this year. "They lack in-depth and comprehensive knowledge about overseas markets, practices and rules."
Offering global contacts, local information and knowledge of best business practices, big firms like BCG, Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu, Ernst and Young, and McKinsey are helping the biggest Chinese businesses gain in-depth insight across all industries from manufacturing to finance.
"Chinese companies need to diversify if they want to continue to grow fast. They need to internationalize and really get into strategic questions about the future - which they didn't have in the past," Nettesheim says.
"Our role is to help them understand how global leaders operate and translate that into a Chinese situation."
Impressive strides
Many of the Chinese companies, after their domestic successes, are looking at overseas mergers and acquisitions to make use of their growing revenues.
From 2006 to 2009, annual investment into the EU by Chinese companies more than tripled from less than $1 billion (815 million euros) every year to $3 billion. From 2009 to 2011, it tripled again to $10 billion, according to the China Invests in Europe report released by Rohdium Group in June.
The trend of Chinese companies investing overseas has continued to grow this year. During the first three months of this year, overall overseas investments jumped by more than 118 percent to $21.1 billion, according to a survey by A Capital, a private equity fund with offices in Beijing, Shanghai and Paris.
Straddling an understanding of both Chinese and Western business practices, premium consultancies are helping bridge the overseas investment gap by connecting Chinese companies with potential partners.
Premium power
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This has led to a majority of big Chinese companies flocking to premium consulting firms to adopt the most up-to-date management practices, says Norman Sze, managing partner for consulting at Deloitte China. With a client list including five of China's top banks, three top telecom companies and several major oil and gas companies, Deloitte is no stranger to working closely with China's State-owned enterprises.
Sze, a pioneer in China's consulting business who started his own company 18 years ago when the industry was just beginning, says often the biggest problem with large enterprises, State-owned or otherwise, is the method in which the companies were formed and the rapid pace at which they have grown.
"Many of the large companies started out with several subsidiaries, each one an individual company, but later consolidated together to form a group, often more like a holding company," he says.
"When that consolidation takes place, the holding companies do not inherit anything to monitor the performance of each subsidiary or business unit."
Deloitte and other big firms have mostly been tasked with the crucial role of helping China's top companies implement internal controls, reporting, financial and human resources systems. "These are the things they really need to improve on aside from the expansion and growth strategy," Sze says.
Streamlining dated management practices for private companies is also a driving force behind the increase in the number of Chinese companies seeking advice from consulting firms.
"You have many private companies where the founders now are getting to an age and a family situation where they think about succession planning and think about handing over the company to other people," Nettesheim says.
"Many of these companies need more modern management practices than if it's just a founder-led company. They need to have high-quality management that is independent from the person."
But changing the management style of a company is akin to changing the culture and while companies may hold a desire for more globalized practices, the implementation of a new management style often encounters resistance.
"Working with Chinese clients presents a different set of challenges than others," Sze from Deloitte says.
"Often domestic companies can expect us to provide global ideas and we do, but when we share it with them they realize that it is something they cannot execute."
This is why being able to understand how Chinese culture works and adapting global practices to the local culture is crucial for any sort of consulting work, he says.
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