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    Latest

    Accenture dwarfed its high-profile rivals, booking $341 million in contracts starting in FY2021, down from $432 million in 2019-20.

    Consultants to lose $5.76b of UK government work

    Public sector consultants are under attack in the UK, following a pullback on their use by the Australian government.

    • Simon Foy
    Jeremy Thorpe hsa left PwC after almost 17 years as a partner and is now a director a Sapere in Sydney on June 14, 2024. Photo: Dominic Lorrimer

    Economist Jeremy Thorpe goes boutique after PwC Australia

    The long-time PwC partner said there had been a clear shift in client demand “away from the big four consulting firms”.

    • Edmund Tadros
    Anshuman Sengar is from consulting firm Kearney, a local AI leader.

    How this senior consultant uses AI to get more work done

    Kearney’s Anshuman Sengar says using generative AI tools to summarise meetings, write emails and research topics has helped him become more effective at work.

    • Edmund Tadros

    From union boss to KPMG chief: ‘Unlearning’ key to Paul Howes’ success

    The senior KPMG partner is as surprised as anyone else that he will chalk up 10 years at the firm next month.

    • Edmund Tadros

    KPMG launches radical overhaul, cuts 200 senior jobs

    KPMG Australia will overhaul its consulting business to focus on tech-related advisory and software installation as part of an $80 million cost-cutting exercise that will include cutting about 200 roles at the firm.

    • Edmund Tadros

    Data Trackers

    The final report by the parliamentary inquiry into audit quality has been tabled.

    Financial Review consulting salary guide 2022-23

    The full guide to how much you can earn at Accenture, Deloitte, KPMG and PwC.

    • Edmund Tadros
    PwC Australia chief executive Kevin Burrowes says the firm is committed to changing its culture.

    PwC seeks absolution but can it really change?

    The publication of two documents and a video apology for the tax leaks scandal this week was meant to be a circuit breaker. But it won’t be that easy.

    • Edmund Tadros

    Professional Moves

    Clyde & Co partners Nicole Wearne, Mark Attard and Ganga Narayanan have jumped to insurance rival Kennedys.

    Clyde & Co slashes partner numbers as cuts deepen

    Global law firm Clyde & Co has asked six partners in its Australian arm to leave, as it struggles to turn a profit from low-margin work.

    • Maxim Shanahan
    Former Accenture managing director Faye Griffiths has joined EY as a partner.

    Consulting firms soften partner intakes despite rise in exits

    The latest partner promotions and appointments at EY, Deloitte and PwC reflect the major downturn in advisory work.

    • Maxim Shanahan and Edmund Tadros
    Olivia Blakiston is a new partner at Gilbert + Tobin.

    G+T targets Melbourne, start-ups with new partners

    The firm is banking on continued growth in Melbourne corporate activity, and is taking a punt on start-ups and venture capital as a new source of clients.

    • Maxim Shanahan
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    This Month

    Consulting pile-on wound back

    The argument for a more company-like corporate form and regulation of professional services partnerships raises two questions that will need thinking through.

    • The AFR View

    Top law firms question AI’s usefulness

    The technology, which has been touted as a revolution in legal practice, will streamline basic tasks but is likely to have limited impact on core legal work.

    • Maxim Shanahan

    Former PwC Australia partner flags legal action against firm

    A former senior partner, Wayne Plummer, has indicated he will sue the firm after being publicly linked to its tax leaks scandal.

    • Edmund Tadros and Maxim Shanahan

    What Senate inquiry said about big four, now trying to ‘rebuild trust’

    The big four consultancies have welcomed the Senate’s final report into the sector, which largely avoided direct criticism of individuals and firms.

    • Maxim Shanahan

    Big four can’t be allowed to stay in ‘grey zone’ of PwC scandal

    The Senate report makes it clear the big accounting firms have fallen through the regulatory gaps. That structural problem must eventually be addressed.

    • James Thomson
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    The consulting free-for-all in Canberra is coming to an end

    A Senate committee’s recommendations go beyond changes made by the federal government after the PwC tax leaks scandal.

    • Edmund Tadros

    Greens call for accounting firms to be limited to 100 partners

    The maximum size of accounting partnerships should be cut from 1000 to 100, and audit firms should be forced to separate their consulting divisions, the Greens say.

    • Edmund Tadros and Maxim Shanahan

    Inquiry calls for strict new rules for big four consulting firms

    Parliamentary approval of contracts and a review of laws governing partnerships are among the final recommendations of a Senate inquiry into outsourcing.

    • Edmund Tadros and Maxim Shanahan

    The simple fix to the PwC scandal that consultants would hate

    On the eve of the final report of the Senate inquiry into the consulting sector, a simple way of ensuring accountability has been proposed.

    • James Thomson

    Don’t obsess on overheads, charities told

    With many charities stretched to the limit, John Wylie’s pro bono consultancy to non-profits has helped them take stock with a survey of what major givers are looking for.

    • Michael Bailey

    Consultants costing NSW twice as much as public servants: report

    The government report also found the big four consulting firms were “increasingly doing generalist work” for the NSW public sector.

    • Edmund Tadros

    You’re free to go, PwC UK says, if you tell anyone, follow this script

    PwC UK has launched a round of “silent lay-offs”, with affected staff told they must not inform colleagues why they are leaving and asked to follow a “suggested wording” if they want to send goodbye messages.

    • Simon Foy

    The rare bright spot in a difficult consulting market

    The Australian arm of Alvarez & Marsal has expanded to 54 managing directors and 300 staff since its launch and is now generating “tens of millions” in local revenue.

    • Edmund Tadros

    The man who made ‘saintly’ judge lose his cool

    A biography of Sir Gerard Brennan reveals the family man who will be remembered for his Mabo judgment.

    • Michael Pelly

    Boards plead with Labor not to rush broader sustainability rules

    The warning from the Australian Institute of Company Directors came despite concerns Australia is “cherry-picking” global sustainability reporting standards.

    • Patrick Durkin
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    Lawyers to the fore as courts tighten screws on privilege claims

    Claiming legal privilege for post-cyberattack reports is now almost impossible, lawyers say, as courts take a more critical view of “woolly” claims.

    • Maxim Shanahan

    Clyde & Co slashes partner numbers as cuts deepen

    Global law firm Clyde & Co has asked six partners in its Australian arm to leave, as it struggles to turn a profit from low-margin work.

    • Maxim Shanahan

    New unit to replace outside consultants in NSW

    NSW will follow the federal government in setting up an in-house consulting unit to reduce spending on the major firms.

    • Maxim Shanahan

    ‘Poacher turned gamekeeper’: The tax commissioner’s secret money trail

    Before he was tax commissioner, Chris Jordan was involved in a transfer from a mystery company in the Isle of Man and a casino junket venture that turned out to be a Ponzi scheme.

    • Neil Chenoweth

    Consulting firms soften partner intakes despite rise in exits

    The latest partner promotions and appointments at EY, Deloitte and PwC reflect the major downturn in advisory work.

    • Maxim Shanahan and Edmund Tadros