Thank you, Kelly.
My name is David Hutton. I'm a senior fellow with the Centre for Free Expression at Toronto Metropolitan University.
Thank you for the invitation to testify.
Based on my experience in the world of management consulting, I hope to provide some insights into what is likely going on in this particular situation. I've also listened to all of the previous testimony and can comment on some of that.
What are my credentials to speak about management consulting?
Early in my career, I was hired by the largest management consulting firm in the U.K. as its internal consultant to apply quality management principles to the firm's operations. It was a wonderful opportunity to study how large firms operate and what causes engagements to go well or badly.
In 1990, after coming to Canada, I founded my own management consulting practice and served what became a diverse international clientele for 20 years. I conducted assessments of various organizations. The Auditor General of Canada at one point, Sheila Fraser, was my client, as well as Xerox Canada, the Ontario government and the United States army bases in Europe.
In total, I led over 100 management system assessments. In the course of these, I partially conducted over 1,500 structured one-on-one interviews with senior executives. I learned a lot about organizational behaviour and how senior executives think.
With regard to the larger consulting firms, I competed against them successfully. I collaborated occasionally on joint projects that I would lead. I often found myself in the position of examining their handiwork and occasionally helping to clean up the mess they had left behind.
There are some major challenges inherent in employing management consultants. One is the inherent imbalance of knowledge and expertise, which makes it difficult for clients to judge the competency of consultants in order to avoid buying a pig in a poke.
While there are many ethical, talented consultants who do wonderful work, the consulting industry is also wide open to shady methods. Some of these are actually common practice. I'll be happy to describe some of these if anyone is interested.
Regarding McKinsey and the sudden spectacular growth in Canada over the past few years, the committee has rightly been exploring whether this growth has been achieved by leveraging personal friendships, since this is a common sales strategy, but there is another possibility: that McKinsey has simply impressed senior decision-makers so much that the doors have been thrown open to them. This is exactly how McKinsey operates.
In the consulting world, there's a hierarchy of perceived prestige. Worldwide, the top three firms are McKinsey, Boston Consulting Group and Bain. They rank at roughly eight out of 10 on that scale. The KPMGs of this world are rated more like six or seven out of 10.
This top-dog status that McKinsey has translates directly into very high fee rates, intimate engagement with clients—both governments and corporations—at the very highest levels, and often a bypassing of the due diligence that would routinely be applied to less well-connected firms.
Does it translate into supremely competent consulting? There's absolutely no guarantee of that. In fact, there are some disturbing examples of what I would describe as serious incompetence. A couple of examples are U.S. Steel and Disney, which are fairly recent and well-documented cases.
How does this play out in Canada? In the past, for a senior bureaucrat to employ McKinsey might have been a risky move, likely to attract scrutiny and criticism because of the outrageous costs and the company's track record, but if the senior leadership becomes convinced that McKinsey is simply the best, then, suddenly, hiring McKinsey can seem like a smart move that is likely to be applauded by one's boss.
What I’ve been describing so far is what can go on and what can go wrong when everyone is working honestly within the rules, but this is not always the reality. In any sizable organization, we can expect that there are some bad actors. In Canada, because of our absolute lack of whistle-blower protection, we have zero protection against the mayhem that such people can predictably cause. We are butt-naked.
Phoenix continues to be the poster child for wilful mismanagement and stunning incompetence. The software still isn’t being fixed, and probably never will be, but the tragedy is that nothing has changed in the management system. We still have the perfect environment for breeding more disasters just like Phoenix.
I have some suggestions for the committee, but I think I'm out of time. Hopefully, that will come up later.