Teaching to learn and learning to teach: notes toward building a university in a management consulting firm
The shape and makeup of a corporate university in a management consulting firm remains a vexed question: what should it look like, and what should it do, to develop its professionals most effectively? There is not a great deal of literature on this topic ‐ or on management, human resources, and professional development in professional services firms in general ‐ as these firms tend to hold their cards close to the vest. This article offers some initial thinking about education and development in a management consulting firm, with the aim of laying out a framework for understanding what a university in such a context might be. The hope is that this consideration of the particular dynamics of management consulting firms and the challenges for education and development therein, coupled with a case study of the curriculum at the management and strategy consulting firm of Booz·Allen & Hamilton, will open up a discussion of the most important factors for success in this arena.
Year of publication: |
1998
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Authors: | Nevins, Mark David |
Published in: |
Career Development International. - MCB UP Ltd, ISSN 1758-6003, ZDB-ID 2031899-6. - Vol. 3.1998, 5, p. 185-193
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Publisher: |
MCB UP Ltd |
Subject: | Consulting | Continuing professional development | Management | Professional service firms | Training |
Saved in:
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