Booz Allen & Hamilton CaseSynopsis:Booz-Allen was one of the first management consultancy firms in the U.S. They had become a multinational organization with offices and consultants based primarily in three main regions: Atlantic, Latin America, and Asia-Pacific-Japan. However, they were currently faced with the decision of whether or not to merge these regions into one global structure. This global structure idea originated from a plan Booz-Allen put in place in 1993 called Vision 2000. This was basically a goal of the organization to increase knowledge sharing and cooperation among the many divisions of their organization by better aligning employees' incentives to cooperate. This plan started with the reorganization of business units away from a geographical basis and more towards a functional basis. This was very successful and almost everyone in the organization agreed it was for the better. However, the true fulfillment of Vision 2000 involved eliminating all geographical units as a way to give clients the best consultants possible regardless of where in the world they were located.
Not everyone at Booz-Allen thought that this was a good idea and the president of Booz-Allen, Brian Dickie, was going to have to make a critical strategic decision for them.
Case Notes:â¢Divided into three regions: Atlantic, Latin America, and Asia-Pacific-Japanâ¢One of first U.S management consultant firmsâ¢Majority of firms important clients were multinational companiesâ¢Growing competition for clients had also increased the competitiveness for consultants and required them to produce more sophisticated solutions better targeted to the clients individual circumstancesâ¢Profit and Loss responsibility was originally allocated to the partners in each geographical regionâ¢New compensation program was introduced that provided incentives for cooperation by tying each partners compensation to the overall success of companyâ¢Partners began to better balance their efforts between sales and client serviceâ¢Some felt the new compensation plan reduced motivation in finding...