Regular
posted 1 May 2000 in Volume 3 Issue 8
Book review: Developing
knowledge-based client relationships
TITLE: Developing Knowledge-Based
Client Relationships – The Future of Professional Services
AUTHOR: Ross
Dawson
PUBLISHER: Butterworth-Heineman, 1999
ISBN: 0750671858
Dawson’s exhaustive text
is organised into ten chapters, plus an appendix on mental models, and is
divided into 3 sections. After an Introduction, Part I explores
knowledge-sharing and professional services; Part II addresses adding value to
clients with knowledge, and Part III looks at implementation (including leading
practices, managing communication with clients, co-creating knowledge with
clients and pricing models). Before the book even begins, the reader is faced
with four pages of nominated endorsement of the text; in the face of promotion
from such alumni, is a review worth writing or reading at all?
While the vague term
‘professional services’ is used in the title, the author is a consultant talking
about the changing nature of consultancy in the face of the emerging global
knowledge economy. Much of the text is delivered in forms of academic
consultant-speak based on neurolinguistic training.
The essential message of this book
includes the following:
Throughout this painstakingly careful book, an artificial sense of
virtue is maintained by suggesting that a useful distinction can be made between
adding value to clients and sharing knowledge with them. In effect, adding value
is clearly a good thing, but sharing knowledge that differentiates the commodity
you offer is much better. Dawson differentiates client-offerings as being either
‘black box’ or knowledge-transfer. Black box consulting involves cheaper,
outsourced services that are not core to the client; where knowledge transfer
relates to the core client functions dedicated to delivering competitive
advantage in the form of new market values, and allows a higher charging
rate.
Dawson
shares Sveiby’s view of knowledge, defining it as “the capacity to act
effectively”. This avoids any differentiation between data, structured data and
information, and tends toward defining knowledge as a kind of competence and not
as something usefully differentiated from information as, say, a visible pattern
whose relocation within a new context creates new value. Like many authors,
Dawson has not explored the context within which Sveiby developed Intellectual
Capital, nor its painful limitations. Then again, for a consultant, it makes
sense to sell a generalised competence to act effectively since they are usually
only as good as their projects allow them to be. And if they were that good,
they would create a form of knowledge that might mean that they no longer have
to be consultants.
There are several items missing from this book. Firstly, awareness of
the lifecycle nature of consulting relationships. In other words, these
relationships have their climaxes, they have their symbolic marriages, their
equivalent of features in Hello magazine and also their secret divorces; when
what became a public partnership that bloomed from an accidental one-night-stand
becomes a bitter and public silence.
Secondly, although the Porter basis of
competition is acknowledged through price and value differentiation, I had hoped
for some acknowledgement toward the Japanese hoshin kanri model, whereby a
client relationship is sustained by continuously working to identify and
anticipate the next customer need before they themselves have thought of
it.
Finally,
although GBN (the Global Business Network) is explicitly mentioned along with
the use of scenario planning as a strategic co-creation process that appears to
have worked at Shell for a period of time, there is no explicit development of
the nature of creativity and its relationship to knowledge-creation in the
consulting process. What Dawson does spend useful time on, is the nature of
mental models and their representation (in the Appendix and in part of Chapter
10).
This text is
full of useful, boxed case studies that develop ideas and themes with specific
examples. Chapter 10, though useful, covers the creation of value in the
knowledge economy in a highly generic way without getting down to the basics.
Chapters 8 and 9, in exploring co-creation and knowledge pricing demonstrate how
far the knowledge economy is developing a potential to displace conventional
models of value and work itself. Similarly, Chapter 7 on ‘Firm-Wide Relationship
Management’ offers a wide variety of practical models for structuring client
contact, reflecting the type of client and the nature of the engagement that an
academic studying consulting practice would find interesting.
Victor Newman is the
director of the Knowledge Development Centre at Cranfield University. He can be
contacted at:v.newman@cranfield.ac.uk
denotes premium content | May 17 2008 






