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Big names have to find the right approach in China

By Andrew Moody (China Daily) Updated: 2014-06-09 07:12

He insists that their DNA has remained locked within the United States and that they have been too reliant on selling standard products and services in the China market that no longer best fit market needs.

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"In management consulting today, most of the large international consulting firms originated in the West, in particular, the United States. Their DNA is very American," he says.

"China is set to become the largest economy in the world but today China has no real representative organization in knowledge-based industries, including management consultancy."

He says there is a gap in the market because the existing Chinese management consultancies - some in existence for almost 20 years and with more than 1,000 consultants - have very much limited themselves to the China market and do not have global reach.

"They are purely Chinese. They started in China and they are run by Chinese and are based only in China. They typically tend to work for only local Chinese clients. They are also fee-based and their fee size is much smaller than the average international consultancy fee. You might say that they have smaller ambitions."

Gao Feng, which will have offices in Hong Kong, Shanghai and Beijing, will start with a core team of 20 but this is expected to rise to 100 next year.

To give it greater scale, the consultancy will be linked to a network of consultants in locations all over the world, many of whom would have worked in the past for the major consultancies.

"We will have a combination of a core team with an extended team of gray hairs who will have extensive experience that our clients will be able to draw on. We believe we can grow from between 50 and 100 percent a year in the foreseeable future."

Tse, who almost has the air of a high priest, has no concern about choosing a Chinese name for the consultancy since he believes it will have resonance in the future.

"The literal translation is high wind but it is actually made up of four Chinese characters, gao feng liang jie, which means integrity.

"You don't have to call yourself something Western-sounding to make an international impact as Huawei (Technologies Co Ltd) or Samsung (Electronics Co Ltd) have proved. I intentionally chose a Chinese name because if we become a global firm in 10, 20 or even 50 years' time, I want people to know our Chinese roots."

Although to some extent disillusioned with the approach of Western management consultancies in China, Tse is very much a product of the industry.

The son of a Hong Kong building contractor, he studied engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology before doing a doctorate and an MBA at the University of California, Berkeley.

He first went into consulting with the Boston Consulting Group in San Francisco in the 1980s before moving back to Hong Kong in 1990.

He was managing partner for China of BCG from 1993 to 1996 before moving to Booz in 1997.

He has also had stints as executive vice-president of corporate strategy for Hong Kong Telecom Ltd and as a part-time member of the Hong Kong SAR government's Central Policy Unit.

He believes the international consultancies have often adopted the wrong approach to China and have been all too keen to sell one-size-fits-all products whether they work in the China context or not.

"The consultancy firms can be too American-centric. The CEO can sit in Cleveland, Ohio, travel very little and not really know the difference between China, Brazil or Russia and just want to sell the same thing everywhere," says Tse.

He says the big names are also very keen to work for the big-fee-paying clients, which is not the right approach in China, where budgets are often smaller.

Big names have to find the right approach in China

Big names have to find the right approach in China

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