Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Boston Consulting Group

 
Hoover's Profile: The Boston Consulting Group Inc.
Contact Information
The Boston Consulting Group Inc.
1 Exchange Place, 31st Fl.
Boston, MA 02109
MA Tel. 617-973-1200
Fax 617-973-1339

Type: Private
On the web: http://www.bcg.com
Employees: 6,000
Employee growth: 0.0%

Global corporations are willing to give much more than a penny for the thoughts of Boston Consulting Group (BCG). One of the world's top-ranked consulting practices, BCG operates from about 65 offices in more than 35 countries in the Americas, Europe, and the Asia/Pacific region. The firm's 4,300 consultants offer a wide array of services, mainly to large corporate clients. BCG's practice areas include branding and marketing, corporate finance, globalization, and information technology. Founded in 1963 by industry pioneer Bruce Henderson, the firm is owned by its employees.

Key numbers for fiscal year ending December, 2008:
Sales: $2,400.0M
One year growth: 2.9%

Officers:
Chairman Emeritus: John S. Clarkeson
Chairman: Carl W. Stern
President and CEO: Hans-Paul Bürkner

Competitors:
Bain & Company
Booz Allen
McKinsey & Company

Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Company History: The Boston Consulting Group
Top

Incorporated: 1968
NAIC: 541611 Administrative Management and General Management Consulting Services

The Boston Consulting Group (BCG), based in Boston, Massachusetts, is one the most influential business strategy consulting firms in the world. BCG employs some 2,800 consultants drawn from the ranks of America's top business schools, including the University of Chicago, Harvard, Stanford, and Wharton (University of Pennsylvania). A major share of the firm's clients are among the world's 500 largest corporations, but BCG also advises mid-sized companies and nonprofits as well as performing some government work. The company's areas of expertise include branding, corporate development, deconstruction, globalization, organization, pricing, strategy, and technology and communications. BCG maintains more than 50 offices located across North America, South America, Europe, the Far East, and Australia.

BCG's founder, Bruce Doolin Henderson, was born in 1930 in Nashville, Tennessee. His father was a Bible publisher. Henderson attended Vanderbilt, earning an engineering degree in 1937. Following brief stints with Frigidaire and Leland Electric Co., he attended Harvard Business School. Henderson dropped out three months before graduation to take a position with Westinghouse Corporation, starting out in sales. He worked his way up the ranks, eventually making vice-president. In 1959, he made a career change and went to work for Arthur D. Little & Co, one of the early pioneers in the business consulting field. Major clients of his included Shell Oil and United Fruit Co., but Henderson soon grew frustrated that at ADL he was unable to fully explore his ideas on how corporations should made their decisions. He shared his views with the CEO of Boston Safe Deposit and Trust Co., another ADL client, and was promptly recruited to start up a consulting department for the bank.

Starting out as the only employee, Henderson launched his consulting unit with Boston Safe Deposit in 1963. He hired his first staff person by the end of the year but still had difficulty landing clients. In 1964, he found a way to attract attention, publishing the first of his "Perspectives," which were short essays designed to stimulate the thinking of senior management. Henderson called them "a punch between the eyes." In truth, he derived the idea from Reader's Digest. He summarized interesting business articles and other relevant writings, compiled them as a letter, and then mailed the so-called Perspective to an exclusive list of top executives. Each of Henderson's Perspectives, which came to be mailed out ten times a year, evolved into an essay presenting his take on the latest business topics. A gimmick in many respects, the Perspectives established Henderson's business in the eyes of corporate America.

According to company lore, it was in the fall of 1965, when the business housed about a dozen consultants, that Henderson announced at a staff meeting that they needed a way to find a specialty to distinguish themselves from their larger, better financed rivals. After dismissing a number of suggestions, he offered "business strategy." The immediate objection was that executives would have no idea what they were talking about. "That's the beauty of it," was his response. "We'll define it."

At this stage in the history of the consulting industry, consultants were brought in to deal with short-term, specific problems. No firm focused on helping corporations plot long-term strategy. Executives were making gut decisions on such important matters as what new product to offer and whether or not to make an acquisition. Moreover, while other consulting firms helped clients to focus on isolated internal operations, Henderson helped them to look outward at the competition and marketplace, as well as to take an overall view of the business. As a result, Henderson's definition of corporate strategy called for an analysis of the company, the competition, and the state of the industry as a whole. This in turn led to the creation of "tools" that could be used to help in understanding these areas and forge new business strategies.

The first of Henderson's revolutionary tools, introduced in 1966, was called the "experience curve," which resulted from work done for a semiconductor manufacturer. It held that unit costs go down as a company gains production experience. The experience curve concept allowed client Texas Instruments to underbid rivals by postulating falling unit costs. Ultimately, the concept led to the conclusion that it was imperative to enter a new field first and to grab as much market share as possible in order to lock in an experience-curve advantage over late-arriving competitors. Another major tool introduced in the 1960s was the product portfolio matrix, which pictured a conglomerate as a box with four quadrants: cash cows, dogs, stars, or question marks. The goal was to achieve a balanced mix of cash cows, stars, and question marks, and to sell off the dogs. The terms cash cow and dog quickly became fixtures in the business lexicon.

Henderson's consulting unit at Boston Safe Deposit was spun off as a subsidiary named Boston Consulting Group in 1968. As the business grew, so did the need for new consultants. By the end of 1968, BCG employed 36 consultants; a year later, that number grew to 62. To meet the need for business talent, the firm began to aggressively recruit at the most prestigious business schools, offering top salaries and luring graduates with promises of cutting-edge, challenging work. In 1970, the number of consultants totaled 100, and in 1971 the figure increased to 130. BCG also opened an office in London in 1970 (its first overseas office was established in Japan in 1966), and then in 1972 the company expanded its operations to Paris. A year later, BCG suffered a setback caused by a raid on its employees and clients by one of Henderson's most valuable lieutenants, Bill Bain.

Bain was a fellow Vanderbilt graduate and director of development at the school, raising funds from alumni at a salary of $19,000 a year. When Vanderbilt began to think about establishing a business school, Bain turned to Henderson for advice. Henderson was so impressed with Bain, despite his lack of basic business knowledge, that he offered him a job with BCG in 1967. Bain quickly rose through the ranks of BCG, becoming known for his hard work, attention to detail, and physically fit appearance. Within two years, he commanded a six-figure salary, rising to the position of vice-president and overseeing one of four BCG divisions, which began to generate a significant share of the firm's revenues. There was talk in the air that Bain was Henderson's likely heir apparent. However, Bain became increasingly frustrated with the BCG approach, convinced he had a better way, and his mentor was not as ready to retire as Bain was eager to succeed him. In 1972, Bain unsuccessfully attempted to pressure Henderson into stepping down.

In 1973, Bain informed Henderson that he and colleague Patrick Graham were leaving to launch their own business, a software company. This announcement came the day before Henderson was scheduled to fly to Spain for a meeting. While dining that first night in Madrid, according to a 1987 Fortune article, he was tracked down "with an urgent call from his secretary. It seems the 'software company' was setting out to solicit BCG clients, although this is a point Bain disputes. Henderson caught the next flight back and frantically began rousting his consultants out of bed to get his firm's clients before Bain did. Recalls Henderson: 'It was war.' By the time the guns stopped firing, several weeks later, Bain and Graham had made off with seven of BCG's consultants and two of its biggest clients, Black & Decker and Texas Instruments." Bain & Co. went on to establish its own niche in the consulting field, devoting itself to a single client in each industry. To the present day, there remains bad blood between the two firms.

BCG opened its second U.S. office in Menlo Park, California, in 1974. A year later, BCG became an independent company, one of the first to take advantage of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1975 that allowed the establishment of an employee stock ownership plan (ESOP). The ESOP began the process of buying BCG from The Boston Company, the parent corporation of Boston Safe Deposit. (The buyout would be completed in 1979, five years ahead of schedule.) Also in 1975, BCG opened an office in Munich. Overseas business became so important to the firm that by the end of 1977 revenues were split evenly between business originating in the United States and overseas. By the end of the decade, BCG opened another U.S. office, in Chicago, and the number of consultants employed rose to 277.

BCG underwent some changes at the top level of management in 1980. Henderson was succeeded as CEO by Alan Zakon and assumed the chairmanship of the board. On the other end of the employment scale, BCG launched its first class of Associates, hired directly out of college. Most would work for the firm for two to three years and then return to school for their MBA's, often resuming their careers at BCG. The firm added offices in Los Angeles and Dusseldorf in 1982, followed by a branch in New York in 1984. A year later, a San Francisco office opened; more importantly, 1985 witnessed Henderson's retirement, although he retained the title of chairman emeritus. (He died in 1992 at the age of 77.) Zakon took over as chairman, and he was replaced as CEO by John Clarkeson. Over the balance of the 1980s, BCG opened offices in Milan, Madrid, Stockholm, and Zurich. During this period, the company also received its first major assignment in China. By the end of the decade, BCG employed 524 consultants.

BCG grew by external means in 1990, acquiring the Australian consulting firm of Pappas, Carter, Evans & Koop in the process adding offices in Sydney and Melbourne, Australia, and Auckland, New Zealand. A year later, BCG completed another acquisition, picking up Holt Planning Associates, and also opened new offices in Frankfurt and Hong Kong. In 1992, BCG opened an office in Kuala Lumpur, followed a year later by offices in Monterrey, Amsterdam, Brussels, and Shanghai. The acquisition of Canada Consulting Group also brought with it an operation in Toronto. BCG reached a milestone in 1993, topping the 1,000 mark in the number of consultants it employed. As the U.S. economy heated up in the mid-1990s, BCG saw the demand for its services increase at a dramatic rate, resulting in a rapid expansion of the firm. In 1994, offices were opened in Dallas, Hamburg, Moscow, Bangkok, and Seoul. BCG then established branches in Atlanta, Buenos Aires, Lisbon, Helsinki, Singapore, and Jakarta in 1995, followed a year later by offices in Washington, D.C., Oslo, and Mumbai.

Clarkeson replaced Zakon as chairman in April 1997 and would soon be succeeded as CEO by Carl Stern, who had been with BCG since graduating at the top of his Stanford class in 1974. Furthermore, in 1997 the firm opened offices in Sao Paulo, Warsaw, Budapest, Stuttgart, and Vienna. International growth continued in 1998 with the addition of branches in Mexico City and Copenhagen. In the final year of the 1990s, after opening a Berlin office, the BCG roster of consultants numbered 2,166. The firm continued its expansive ways as a new century dawned, opening a New Delhi office. BCG also partnered with Goldman Sachs to create a venture called iFormation, which was dedicated to the creation of new economy startups. In 2001, BCG opened offices in Athens, Beijing, Istanbul, Prague, Cologne, and Rome as the number of BCG consultants approached 2,800. Much of BCG's growth during the dot-com era of the late 1990s came from older corporations fearful of lacking an Internet strategy as well as high-tech start-ups looking for help in establishing themselves as viable, stable companies. The consulting industry as a whole enjoyed a golden age.

When the dot-com bubble burst, however, and the U.S. economy began to slip in 2001 and worsened in 2002, BCG was forced to adjust to a decrease in business, as clients were reluctant to commit to consulting projects. In February 2002, BCG announced it was cutting some 12 percent of its consulting and support staff in North and South America. The company was not alone in taking this step--all of its major competitors had already been forced to trim staff. During other recessions, consulting firms had appeared to be out of favor, only to bounce back when conditions improved. This time, however, many observers began to question whether a major sea change was taking place. Consulting firms, especially BCG, had never been at a loss to conceive and market big ideas, but now they appeared adrift, unable to produce the next new concept that would serve as a spur to new business. According to a July 2002 Boston Globe article, BCG was "pitching 'asset productivity' and 'competitive advantage through price.' ... But until the consulting world generates a new approach that synchs up with the times, many potential customers will probably remain in their bunkers until the dark clouds blow over." Traditional management firms like BCG appeared to be especially at risk, as consulting projects increasingly came to involve the implementation of technology. In 2000, it was estimated that 57 percent of the U.S. consulting market was devoted to IT services, and that number was expected to grow to 70 percent by 2004. To make matters worse for the pure-play strategy firms, they found themselves challenged on two fronts. On one side, the large technology implementation firms were moving into general consulting; on the other, a number of companies developed in-house strategy teams, often at the expense of consulting firms, which found their staffs raided, in some cases by former clients. Moreover, upstart technology-oriented firms that had managed to survive the high-tech meltdown were also looking to offer strategic advice to bolster their own bottom lines. The days of large, opened-ended projects also appeared to be outmoded. Now consultants were generally brought in to accomplish specific projects, an ironic development for BCG, given that the firm made its mark by breaking away from this practice 30 years earlier. Nevertheless, traditional strategic consulting firms like BCG retained many strengths. According to a Fortune profile of the changes taking place in the consulting industry, these firms "still house enormous talent and a wealth of knowledge about how successful businesses operate. But their future will look very different. Many people believe that they are going to get a lot smaller. Their partners may splinter off into several smaller boutique firms. Or they may merge with an IT outfit to gain tech expertise and access to new markets."

Whether or not any of these speculations become reality, BCG entered this period of uncertainty with a new person in charge. In 2003, BCG partners elected Hans-Paul Burkner to replace Stern as president and CEO. Burnker--who joined BCG in 1981, made partner in 1987, and opened the Frankfurt office in 1991--became the first European to head the firm. According to Tom Rodenhaurer, president of Consulting Information Services, as quoted by the New York Times, "He has his work cut out for him. How do you sustain a partnership in an environment where it does not look like it will get better in the next couple years?"

Principal Operating Units

Branding; Consumer; Corporate Development; Deconstruction; E-Commerce; Energy; Financial Services; Globalization; Health Care; Industrial Goods; Information Technology; Operational Effectiveness; Organization; Pricing; Strategy; Technology & Communications; Travel & Tourism.

Principal Competitors

Bain & Company; McKinsey & Company; Booz Allen Hamilton Inc.

Further Reading

Denison, D.C., "Boston Consultants Seek to Justify Their Services in Cost-Slashing Climate," Boston Globe, July 14, 2002.

O'Shea, James, and Charles Madigan, Dangerous Company, New York: Times Press, 1997, 355 p.

Petersen, Melody, "Consultant Gets First European President," New York Times, April 8, 2003, p. C14.

Rothschild, Michael, "The Henderson Revolution," Upside, December 1992.

Silverman, Rachel Emma, "Boston Consulting Group to Trim Rolls of Consultants, Support Staff," Wall Street Journal, February 19, 2002, p. B2.

— Ed Dinger


Wikipedia: Boston Consulting Group
Top
The Boston Consulting Group
Type Partnership
Founded 1963
Headquarters Flag of the United States.svg Boston, Massachusetts
66 offices in 38 countries
Key people Hans-Paul Bürkner, President & CEO
Industry Management consulting
Products Management consulting services
Revenue US$ 2.4 billion (2008)
Employees about 7,000
Website bcg.com

The Boston Consulting Group (BCG) is a global management consulting firm, founded by Bruce Henderson in 1963. It has 66 offices in 38 countries, and its current CEO is Hans-Paul Bürkner. BCG is generally ranked as one of the two most "prestigious" management consulting firms in the world.[1]

The firm prides itself on its employee-focused culture, and over the last 4 years has been the only top-tier consulting firm to appear in Fortune magazine's "Best companies to work for" report. In the 2009 list, BCG is listed as the 3rd best company to work at, and is the only top-tier consulting firm to appear in the top 100.[2]

The company was formed when Henderson, a Harvard Business School alumnus, left Arthur D. Little to become head of a new management consulting division of the Boston Safe Deposit and Trust Company.

In 1975 Henderson arranged an employee stock ownership plan, so that the employees could take the company independent from The Boston Safe Deposit and Trust Company. The buyout of all shares was completed in 1979.

Contents

Thought Leadership

BCG Growth-Share Matrix

Growthsharematrix.png

In the 1970s, BCG created and popularized the "Growth-Share Matrix", a simple chart to assist large corporations in deciding how to allocate cash among their business units. The corporation would categorize its business units as "Stars", "Cash Cows", "Question Marks", and "Dogs", and then allocate cash accordingly, moving money from "cash cows" toward "stars" and "question marks" that had higher market growth rates, and hence higher upside potential.

The chart was popular for two decades and "continues to be used as a primer in the principles of portfolio management," as BCG says.

Experience Curve

The Experience Curve illustrates that the more often a task is performed the lower will be the cost of doing it. The task can be the production of any good or service. Each time cumulative volume doubles, value added costs (including administration, marketing, distribution, and manufacturing) fall by a constant and predictable percentage.

In the late 1960s Bruce Henderson, the founder of BCG, began to emphasize the implications of the experience curve for strategy.[3] BCG research concluded that because relatively low cost of operations is a very powerful strategic advantage, firms should capitalize on these learning and experience effects.[4] The reasoning is increased activity leads to increased learning, which leads to lower costs, which can lead to lower prices, which can lead to increased market share, which can lead to increased profitability and market dominance. According to BCG, the most effective business strategy was one of striving for market dominance in this way. This was particularly true when a firm had an early leadership in market share. It was claimed that if you cannot get enough market share to be competitive, you should get out of that business and concentrate your resources where you can take advantage of experience effects and gain dominant market share. The Growth-Share Matrix was developed (in part) to manage this strategy.

Advantage Matrix

Another "BCG Matrix", much less widely known, is the Advantage Matrix. The two axes are economies of scale and differentiation. The four quadrants formed are called "Volume", "Stalemated", "Specialized", and "Fragmented".

Publications

BCG regularly publishes articles, industry reports, and government commissioned studies relating to particular industries or business functions. For example, a recent series of articles called "Collateral Damage" discusses how the Subprime Crisis is affecting non-financial companies, and what they can do to survive.

In addition, many partners have written books on issues facing management in the modern business environment. Some recent publications include:

  • Globality: Competing with Everyone from Everywhere for Everything. By Harold L. Sirkin, James W. Hemerling and Arindam K. Bhattacharya, 2008.
  • The Boston Consulting Group on Strategy. By Carl W. Stern and Michael S. Deimler, 2006. Classic anthology of articles on strategy and management
  • Payback - Reaping the Rewards of Innovation. By James P. Andrew and Harold L. Sirkin, 2006. Published by the Harvard Business School Press, Payback has become a staple in the MBA curriculum.
  • Treasure Hunt - Inside the Mind of the New Consumer. By Michael J. Silverstein with John Butman, 2006.
  • Trading Up - Why Consumers Want New Luxury Goods and How Companies Create Them. By Michael J. Silverstein and Neil Fiske, 2003. A BusinessWeek Bestseller and Berry AMA book prize winner.
  • The Change Monster - The Human Forces that Fuel or Foil Corporate Transformation and Change. Jeanie Daniel Duck, 2002.
  • Clausewitz on Strategy. By Tiha von Ghyczy and Bolko von Oetinger, 2001.
  • Blown to Bits - How the New Economics of Information Transforms Strategy. By Philip Evans and Thomas S. Wurster, 2000.

Recruiting

BCG typically hires for an Associate or a Consultant position. Whilst so called "lateral hires" as Project Leader, Principal or Partner are possible, they are not the norm. BCG recruits undergraduates to join as Associates from the world's top academic institutions. In the United States, this includes about a dozen top private institutions. Many Associates receive sponsorship to pursue an MBA, returning to BCG upon completion. A very small number of Associates are permitted to advance without obtaining an MBA. The vast majority of Associates attend one of the top business schools (most often, but not only Harvard, Stanford, MIT Sloan, Wharton, Kellogg and INSEAD). A few complete JDs, MD and other graduate degrees at various institutions (called ADCs for Advance Degrees Consultants). Like most consulting firms, BCG uses a modified version of the Cravath System.

BCG recruits MBA graduates to join as Consultants from the world's top business schools. BCG also makes large efforts to hire advanced non-business degree holders. Graduates holding J.D.s, M.D.s and Ph.D.s in disciplines like engineering, science, and liberal arts receive training in business fundamentals and then typically join the firm as Consultants. There is also an opportunity to join as a Summer Associate or Summer Consultant (internship) position for 10 weeks, which for the majority of interns will result in an offer for full-time position.

Interview process

BCG uses the case method to conduct interviews, which is an interview technique designed to simulate the types of problems inherent in management consulting and to test the qualitative and quantitative skills deemed important for abstract thinking in a business setting. There are multiple case interviews before an offer for employment is extended.

Competitors

BCG competes most directly with McKinsey & Company, Bain & Company, Monitor Group and Booz & Company. These are consistently rated as the most "prestigious" consulting firms,[1] and are considered to be "pure strategy" firms.

BCG also occasionally competes with other firms such as Deloitte, PricewaterhouseCoopers, Accenture, Ernst & Young but less directly. These firms are generally priced significantly lower, and offer a different value proposition, often focused on their ability to implement the recommendations they give. It is common for a company to employ BCG as well as some of these firms, but often for different types of work.

Offices

Offices in Asia Pacific

New Zealand Auckland founded in 1990
Thailand Bangkok founded in 1994
People's Republic of China Beijing founded in 2001
Hong Kong Hong Kong founded in 1990
Indonesia Jakarta founded in 1995
Malaysia Kuala Lumpur founded in 1992
Australia Melbourne founded in 1990
India Mumbai founded in 1996

Japan Nagoya founded in 2003
India New Delhi founded in 2002
South Korea Seoul founded in 1994
People's Republic of China Shanghai founded in 1993
Singapore Singapore founded in 1995
Australia Sydney founded in 1990
Republic of China Taipei founded in 2003
Japan Tokyo founded in 1966

Offices in Europe and the Middle East

United Arab Emirates Abu Dhabi founded in 2007
Netherlands Amsterdam founded in 1993
Greece Athens founded in 2001
Spain Barcelona founded in 2002
Germany Berlin founded in 1999
Belgium Brussels founded in 1993
Hungary Budapest founded in 1997
Germany Cologne founded in 2001
Denmark Copenhagen founded in 1998
United Arab Emirates Dubai founded in 2007
Germany Düsseldorf founded in 1982
Germany Frankfurt founded in 1991
Germany Hamburg founded in 1994
Finland Helsinki founded in 1995
Turkey Istanbul founded in 2003 closed in 2005
Ukraine Kiev founded in 2007

Portugal Lisbon founded in 1995
United Kingdom London founded in 1970
Spain Madrid founded in 1987
Italy Milan founded in 1986
Russia Moscow founded in 1994
Germany Munich founded in 1975, European headquarters
Norway Oslo founded in 1996
France Paris founded in 1972
Czech Republic Prague founded in 2004
Italy Rome founded in 2001
Sweden Stockholm founded in 1988
Germany Stuttgart founded in 1997
Austria Vienna founded in 1997
Poland Warsaw founded in 1997
Switzerland Zürich founded in 1989

Offices in the Americas

United States Atlanta founded in 1995
United States Boston founded in 1963, Global Headquarters
Argentina Buenos Aires founded in 1995
United States Chicago founded in 1979
United States Dallas founded in 1994
United States Detroit founded in 2005
United States Houston founded in 2003
United States Los Angeles founded in 1982
Mexico Mexico City founded in 1998
United States Miami founded in 2003

United States Minneapolis founded in 2007
Mexico Monterrey founded in 1993
United States New Jersey founded in 2006
United States New York founded in 1984
United States Philadelphia founded in 2007
United States San Francisco founded in 1974
Chile Santiago founded in 2002
Brazil São Paulo founded in 1997
Canada Toronto founded in 1993
United States Washington, D.C. founded in 1996

Companies founded by current and former employees

Finance

Non-profit

Travel

Other

Notable current and former employees

Business

Politics and public service

Academia

Others

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Vault.com, "Management Strategy Consulting Firms Rankings: Top 50 Consulting Firms, 2009"
  2. ^ Fortune Magazine, "100 Best Companies To Work For, 2009"
  3. ^ Hax, Arnoldo C.; Majluf, Nicolas S. (October 1982). "Competitive cost dynamics: the experience curve". Interfaces 12: 50–61. doi:10.1287/inte.12.5.50. 
  4. ^ Henderson, Bruce (1974, #149). "The Experience Curve Reviewed: V. Price Stability" ([PDF] Reprint). Perspectives (The Boston Consulting Group). http://www.bcg.com/publications/files/experiencecurveV.pdf. Retrieved 2007-03-24. 
  5. ^ Moore, Galen. "Financial tech web plays arise from ashes of economy." Mass High Tech. July 31, 2009
  6. ^ Chief Executive magazine. "CEO of the Year 2005."
  7. ^ Cohan, Peter. "Will Obama serve Sam Adams at this week's White House happy hour?." DailyFinance.com. July 28, 2009
  8. ^ VCgate. "Kayak.com Leading The Travel Search Engine Market." March 14, 2009
  9. ^ Business Wire. "Appointments Within LVMH's Watch & Jewellery Business Group." July 12, 2000
  10. ^ GMAC Financial Services press release. "New GMAC Board of Directors is Established." May 27, 2009
  11. ^ Yamazaki, Tomoko and Sato, Shigeru. "TCI Loses More Than Face as Japan Says No to Foreigners Playing." Bloomberg L.P.. July 29, 2009
  12. ^ Thomson Reuters. "News Corp appoints Jan Koeppen COO Europe and Asia." March 19, 2009
  13. ^ Kallmeyer, N. 'Mini Moguls: One good idea can lead to a career' Sydney Morning Herald, 25 June 2008, p.4
  14. ^ Hiralal, Baz. "J.P. Morgan banker exits to advise Russia on M&A?." TheDeal.com. May 15, 2009.
  15. ^ Byrt, William John. "Management Education: An International Survey"

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Hoover's Profile. ©2008 Hoover's, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Company History. International Directory of Company Histories. Copyright © 2006 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Boston Consulting Group" Read more