Introduction to Consulting
- Description
- Curriculum
- FAQ
- Reviews
This course is based on Dr. Firth’s personal experience teaching new consultants for KPMG’s national consulting practice for over six years, in addition to over ten years teaching the University of Montana’s College of Business undergraduates and graduate students all about consulting. Hundreds of Dr Firth’s consulting class students have found very well paid positions with consulting firms locally and nationally. Dr. Firth is recognized nationally by several very well known consulting firms for his role in preparing students for great careers in consulting.
The course is primarily aimed at those wanting to join a consulting firm, rather than start their own consulting firm. This can be college undergraduates, college graduates, or experienced practitioners out in the workforce. That said, all the topics are 100% practically applicable and would help tremendously those starting their own firms.
The course covers critical, practical issues including:
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First impressions, and how to make them better both during the hiring process, and as a consultant
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How a consulting firm makes money. Knowing this helps you play your role and be more valued as a result if you work for a firm, or are wanting to work for a consulting firm
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Why chargeability is the #1 metric for a consultant, how it gets calculated, and how you can change it
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Why realization is the #1 metric for a consulting firm, how it gets calculated, and your role in it
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The immutable consulting triangle of scope-cost-schedule
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All aspects of a real consulting proposal. We work through a detailed example and explain all the parts
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A real budget for a consulting project. We work through every piece of a real budget for a consulting project, explaining why each part is there and how the parts interact
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All aspects of a consulting meeting from planning, to where to sit in the meeting room, to how to take notes and ask great questions
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What to avoid when running a consulting meeting, including poor types of questions and issues such as avoiding social desirability
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2What is consulting and why do companies use consultants?
In this lecture we talk about what consulting is, and why companies would hire a consultant. Understanding this better places you to provide the right sorts of consulting services, as well as help you understand what a consulting firm is looking for when they want to hire a new consultant.
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3What do consultants provide?
In this lecture we talk about the four main things consulting firms provide to their clients: objectivity, broad experience from dealing with a variety of clients, analytical skills as a result on a focus on delivering solutions, and the time to actually work on things.
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4What does being a consultant mean for your salary?
In this lecture we talk about what being a consultant means for you when it comes to salary. We also talk about how higher than average salaries as a consultant means that the work you do is not simple but full of ambiguity.
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5What does it take to be a successful consultant?
In this lecture we discuss what it takes to be a successful consultant. A good deal of what it takes is being a visible professional, and having what is called "conversational competence". One good part of working for a consulting firm (rather than starting your own firm) is that you will pick up a great deal of conversational competence from being around your consulting colleagues and being with clients.
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6Tell me about yourself
Up to 70% of clients leave their consulting firm as a result of the actions of one consultant on the team. Usually this has nothing to do with the work being performed and everything to do with the person performing the work. The impression you make on others is important, and making a good first impression is critical.
In this lecture we talk about handling what is often the first question from a consulting firm looking to hire you, or a client looking to find out more about you as a consultant: "Tell me about yourself...?"
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7Setting yourself up on, and using, LinkedIn
LinkedIn the professional version of Facebook. With over 500 million subscribers, LinkedIn is a global force. I have consulting firms tell me that they won't even hire someone unless they have a LinkedIn profile, and I have had former students tell me that their consulting firm recruiters just use a person's resume for the name to look them up on LinkedIn.
In this lecture we talk about getting yourself set up on LinkedIn correctly.
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8A consulting resume
Crafting a good resume is critical to getting hired by a consulting firm. It is also a critical piece of documentation when a consulting firm is pitching to be hired by a client for a project.
In this lecture we talk about crafting a skills-based resume that focuses not on a chronology of what you have done (which is a traditional resume) but on the skills you bring to the table right now for the consulting firm or client.
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9The cover letter
Clients of consulting firms are not going to need a cover letter from you. This is only for when you are applying for a consulting position at a consulting firm. The cover letter is a critical component of the application process as it shows how you engage in communication professionally. This lecture shows you what goes in a great cover letter to a consulting firm.
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10Finders, Minders & Grinders, and the #1 metric for new consultants: Chargeabilty
If you understand how money is made by a consulting firm, then you can make sure you play your part in the process as well as possible.
In this lecture we talk about the different levels within a consulting firm, which I call finder, minder and grinder.
We then discuss the #1 metric in consulting, which is chargeability - what it is, how it is calculated, and why it matters to the consulting firm and to you.
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11Chargeability - how you can impact the #1 metric for a consultant
The #1 metric as a consultant is chargeability. In this lecture we discuss how you can impact your own chargeability.
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12Realization - the #1 metric for managers and partners in a consulting firm
For a consulting firm, the way they know the firm is successful (not necessarily the consultants themselves, but the firm itself) is how much profit each consulting engagement makes. In the consulting world this is called realization.
In this lecture we discuss what realization is, how it is calculated, and what can impact it.
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13A case example to show how the pieces fit together
We work an example of a consulting firm to show how all the pieces fit together: people, rates, chargeability, and overhead.
This section deals with people. How many managers and staff consultants are needed based on how many partners there are.
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14A case example - all the pieces put together
We work an example of a consulting firm to show how all the pieces fit together: people, rates, chargeability, and overhead.
This section walks through a template to help you solve the case.
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15A case example - the solution
We work an example of a consulting firm to show how all the pieces fit together: people, rates, chargeability, and overhead.
This section walks through the solution from start to end.
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16Partners Salaries
Partners in a consulting firm don't get paid a regular salary. They take "a draw" from the consulting firm's earnings.
In this lecture we discuss how partners in a consulting firm get paid.
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17Making more
We worked an example of a consulting firm to show how all the pieces fit together: people, rates, chargeability, and overhead.
In this lecture we show how all these pieces interact. If you make a change in one place, there are consequences in other places. If the partners want to make more money, we show how they could get this done, and the consequences of each change they make.
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18The consulting proposal: the cover sheet
In this section of the course we are walking through an actual consulting proposal.
In this lecture we cover the cover sheet, or front page of the proposal.
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19The consulting proposal: the table of contents
In this section of the course we are walking through an actual consulting proposal.
In this lecture we cover the table of contents for the proposal.
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20The consulting proposal: the problem statement
In this section of the course we are walking through an actual consulting proposal.
In this lecture we cover the problem statement, which is the problem that the consulting project that this consulting proposal is about is hoping to solve.
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21The consulting proposal: Objectives and scope
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22The consulting proposal: Statement of Work or Approach
In this section of the course we are walking through an actual consulting proposal.
In this lecture we cover the statement of work, or the approach that will be used to do the work that this consulting proposal is proposing.
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23The consulting proposal: Statement of Work or Approach (part 2)
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24The consulting proposal: Project timeline
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25The consulting proposal: Major assumptions
In this section of the course we are walking through an actual consulting proposal.
In this lecture we cover the major assumptions that are critical in writing the proposal.
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26The consulting proposal: Project staffing
In this section of the course we are walking through an actual consulting proposal.
In this lecture we cover project staffing and how to present that in the proposal.
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27The consulting proposal: Fees
In this section of the course we are walking through an actual consulting proposal.
In this lecture we cover the fees for the proposal how to present them. We will cover exactly how to come up with a budget for a consulting engagement in a different section of this course.
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28The consulting proposal: Expenses
In this section of the course we are walking through an actual consulting proposal.
In this lecture we cover expenses, and how you present them in a consulting proposal.
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29The consulting proposal: Terms and Conditions
In this section of the course we are walking through an actual consulting proposal.
In this lecture we cover adding terms and conditions to the proposal. These are standard and largely legal parts of the proposal and whilst important don't change much at all from engagement to engagement.
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30The consulting proposal: References and resumes
In this section of the course we are walking through an actual consulting proposal.
In this lecture we cover how you add references from other work you've done and your resumes to the consulting proposal.
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31The consulting proposal: From a proposal to an engagement
In this section of the course we are walking through an actual consulting proposal.
In this lecture we cover what it takes to convert a consulting proposal to a consulting engagement.
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32Budgeting a consulting engagement - introduction
We have worked our way down from a firm-level of understanding how money is made and now we are at the individual engagement level. Key concepts such as realization come in to play here. Understanding how a budget is made up, and where you fit in to that budget is very important to your success, as you will be measured very closely against the budget.
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33Budgeting a consulting engagement - what goes in a budget
We look again at how money gets made at the firm-level and bring the important parts of that, which includes realization, to budgeting the engagement.
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34Budgeting a consulting engagement - the immutable triangle
Immutable means that you can't change it. In this lecture we look at how the ways scope, cost and schedule of a consulting project interact with each other are immutable (unchangeable).
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35Budgeting a consulting engagement - the immutable triangle continued
A continued discussion of the immutable consulting triangle of cost-scope-schedule with examples of how it works.
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36Budgeting a consulting engagement - the immutable triangle and clients
As we continue our important discussion of the immutable consulting triangle of cost-scope-schedule we now apply to clients.
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37Budgeting a consulting engagement - the immutable triangle and quality
The immutable triangle of consulting, scope-schedule-cost, is indeed unchangeable, as is the dimension of quality, which we talk about in this lecture.
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38Budgeting a consulting engagement - the immutable triangle and healthcare
In this lecture I talk about how the immutable triangle of cost-schedule-scope applies to healthcare
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39Budgeting a consulting engagement - the timeline for the project
The timeline is a critical component of every budget. As we discussed in the immutable triangle of consulting, scope-cost-schedule are all inter-related so you need to make sure that the timeline for the project is reasonable and achievable.
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40Budgeting a consulting engagement - estimating the size of tasks
If you are budgeting an engagement, knowing how big a task is is an important part of the process. We discuss how to work with this in this lecture.
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41Budgeting a consulting engagement - tips for budgeting well
A contingency is something you set aside in case something bad happens. The question we are answering here is: how big a contingency should you build in to your consulting budget?
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42Budgeting a consulting engagement - tips for budgeting well
In this lecture we give you advice, tips, for budgeting well.
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43Budgeting a consulting engagement - can you charge for learning?
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44Budgeting a consulting engagement - charging for administrative expenses
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45Budgeting a consulting engagement - the critical path of a project
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46Budgeting a consulting engagement - doing what you promised
What did you promise you would do in your consulting proposal? In this lecture we discuss making sure that what you said you would do for your consulting client is what you are actually budgeting to do in your consulting budget.
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47Budgeting a consulting engagement - walkthrough of an actual budget spreadsheet
In this lecture we start the process of walking through an actual Excel spreadsheet of a real consulting engagement so you can see how all the pieces fit together.
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48Budgeting a consulting engagement - admin expenses on the spreadsheet
As we walk through the Excel spreadsheet for this real consulting engagement we take a look at how administrative expenses are factored in.
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49Budgeting a consulting engagement - the project itself on the spreadsheet
As we continue our walk through of a real Excel spreadsheet for a consulting engagement we are now in to the heart of the spreadsheet where we have people and the hours they spend on various parts of the project.
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50Budgeting a consulting engagement - Fees at standard on the spreadsheet
The first output from a consulting budget spreadsheet is called Fees at Standard. This is the fees that a client would pay for the work to be done at standard rates.
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51Budgeting a consulting engagement - Fees at ERP on the spreadsheet
Consulting work is rarely done at standard rates. In this lecture we discuss how we use a real consulting Excel spreadsheet to figure out what the fees would be for the client at various estimated realization percentages.