Fast Five (consulting)
The "Fast Five" were a group of publicly traded consulting firms that developed in the mid 1990s to capitalize on the rapid commercial development of the Internet. The term "Fast Five" was coined to draw a contrast with the established "Big Five" accounting firms with management consulting arms, and to make the point that the new breed of consulting firms was more nimble and could produce more rapid results.
Publicly traded | |
Industry | consulting firms |
Founded | 1990s |
Business performance and rapid growth
The firms innovate both technology and methodology, developing new techniques better adapted for Web site design and construction, along with back-end internet infrastructure. For example, Viant created a service model to obtain maximum utilization of the three essential disciplines (creative, business strategists, and technical professionals/software developers).[1]
Deliverables move forward based on team consensus, with input from all three disciplines. Prior to the service model, most professional services firms utilized a waterfall model of system development where results from one phase were thrown "over the wall" with limit input from the team that would handle the next phase.[2]
Distinctive cultures
Most of the firms felt a need to differentiate themselves in their approach to employees and their appearance to clients. Razorfish created uniquely styled business cards. VIANT had strong ideas about office space needing to be located around the energy of a downtown area of a city.[3][4]
Staff and knowledge management
Another area of innovation was in knowledge management. The firms created internal intranets, office spaces, and organizational incentives and structures designed to encourage information sharing, as opposed to knowledge hoarding.[5]
Viant
Viant's office space was created with Dunbar's number in mind, so that an office that grew to over 100 consultants would 'spawn' a new office with a small nucleus of experienced consultants. The goal was to limit the size of any one office to no more than 125 to 130 consultants, keeping the total number in the office well below Dunbar's estimate of 150. The effect was that each consultant in the office could maintain stable social relationships with everyone else.[6]
Rapid business growth
The firms grew rapidly, often increasing their annual revenues and staff at over 100% per year.[7]
Decline during the Dot-com downturn
Despite the aggressive growth of their businesses, most of the firms stock prices and prospects collapsed by late 2000 or early 2001, due to the collapse of the Internet bubble as well as increased competition from the "Big Five" and other established technology consulting firms.[8][9]
Firms in the "fast five"
- VIANT (internet consultancy) (NASDAQ:VIAN) - absorbed into divine Inc.
- Scient (NASDAQ:SCNT)- absorbed into iXL
- Razorfish (NASDAQ:RAZF)
- iXL - (NASDAQ:IIXL) merged into Razorfish
- USWeb then MarchFirst (NASDAQ:USWB) then (NASDAQ:MRCH)
References
- "Viant Powers Della & James for E-commerce success". PR Newswire.
- "ANDERSEN CONSULTING LAUNCHES FOUNDATION SOFTWARE ORGANIZATION; CREATES WORLD'S LARGEST ENTERPRISE APPLICATION DEVELOPMENT ORGANIZATION". Business Wire. 13 Oct 1995. Retrieved 20 July 2010.
- KAY THORNE; CLAYTON GLEN. "Developing a Business-Driven, Outcomes-Focused Talent Strategy" (PDF). pp. 57–64. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-03-09.
- Welles, Edward O (1 Dec 1999). "New Economy, New Culture". CRN - computer reseller news. Retrieved 19 July 2010.
- Stewart, Thomas A (2003). The Wealth of Knowledge: Intellectual Capital and the Twenty-first Century Organization. pp. 207–213. ISBN 978-0-385-50072-2.
- Welles, Ed. "Mind gains". Inc. magazine. Retrieved 15 August 2012.
- Malik, Om (17 Feb 1999). "VIANT: We Only Do Digital". Forbes (magazine). Retrieved 19 July 2010.
- Green, Heather (19 March 2001). "A web hotshot learns humility". Business Week. Archived from the original on 4 December 2010. Retrieved 19 July 2010.
- The Oxford handbook of strategy: a strategy overview and competitive strategy By David O. Faulkner, Andrew Campbell