Analysis Group's CEO on Managing with Soft Metrics
Por um escritor misterioso
Descrição
Before she joined Analysis Group, the author worked at a small economic consulting firm that—like most other firms in the industry—closely tracked and measured the profitability of each office and each practice area. That approach, she observed, created a lot of internal competition and divisiveness. In addition, the compensation model was formula-based and data-driven, largely determined by who was selling new business. Analysis Group uses a much different model: It determines partners’ compensation without relying on formulas; it doesn’t obsess over false precision about who sold what business; and pay isn’t strictly a function of billable hours. Instead, extensive, informed discussion of each person’s contributions to the firm leads to a decision about what pay seems fair. For one thing, Samuelson writes, in a professional services firm it’s not always clear who deserves credit for a specific action. She is convinced that the firm’s unconventional model is one of the reasons its culture is so strong.
Systematic Modeling of log D7.4 Based on Ensemble Machine Learning, Group Contribution, and Matched Molecular Pair Analysis
How Software Companies Can Get More Bang for Their R&D Buck
How to Measure Culture Change: 8 Methods for Your Business - AIHR
Qualitative Analysis: Definition, How it works, Factors, Example
Retrospective Analysis - FourWeekMBA
The Top 100 Healthcare Technology Companies of 2022
Top 11 Financial Analysis Books of all Time to Read in 2023 - Oak Business Consultant
Maximizing Salesforce ROI in 2023: Strategies & Metrics to Consider
Technical Analysis in Commodity Trading - A Chat with Eddie Tofpik - CTW
Predictive Analytics in Human Resources - AIHR
SoftBank hits back at S&P after it cuts credit rating further into junk