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25 Aug 2011
Every year White Space ranks professional services firms in terms of their thought leadership presence. Fiona Czerniawska, who I interviewed for this blog earlier this year, is one of the global authorities on thought leadership, particularly in the management consultancy space.
White Space is a subscriber-based web service for anyone interested in thought leadership. They offer qualitative and quantitative evaluation of more than 18,000 pieces of thought leadership from about 25 leading consulting firms.
They rate consulting firms’ thought leadership twice a year, in July and in January/February.
Thought leadership ranking criteria
What I find interesting and what is a valuable lesson for any firm interested in thought leadership, are the criteria Fiona uses to rank thought leadership at these firms.
A single ranking criteria is way too narrow and limiting and as Fiona says: “It tends to mask the fact that firms tend to be good at different things.” So instead she has come up with four different quality criteria:
- Differentiation – the originality or distinctiveness of thought leadership conclusions
- Resilience – the depth of thinking and/or extent of evident research
- Appeal – the extent to which clients will perceive the material to be relevant to their specific circumstances
- Appropriate commercialisation – the likelihood the material will encourage the audience to take action.
Good thought leadership campaigns should…
When one dissects these criteria they reflect exactly what a good thought leadership campaign should comprise i.e.
- It should differentiate you from the competition
- It should show deep, empirical research to back up your experience, interpretation and opinion
- It should absolutely be client centric – in fact you should have first researched the client’s issues and challenges now and into the future
- It should singularly aim to achieve something with your clients or prospects e.g. to get in front of the boards of the top 100 listed companies.
The thought leadership rankings
Fiona’s rankings show that the group of firms at the top end has not changed dramatically. Booz&company is just ahead of what Fiona has labelled “ a resurgent Boston Consulting Group” whose position went from 6 to 2.
The reason for their resurgence? White Space says that it is not only because of some of their excellent material but also because they managed to weed out or avoid poorer-quality material.
Another firm that moved up the rankings was Accenture which moved from eight to six.
Besides the names already mentioned, other names that cropped up across the four criteria included: McKinsey, IBM, Roland Berger, PwC, Right Management, Hay Group, E&Y and KPMG
White Space is a subscriber-based web service for anyone interested in thought leadership. They offer qualitative and quantitative evaluation of more than 18,000 pieces of thought leadership from about 25 leading consulting firms.
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