Articles
The top 10 stereotypes of financial services consultants
We know what you’re thinking… You’d like to improve areas of your business but you aren’t sure where to start. You know the problem, you just don’t know the solution. …
We know what you’re thinking…
You’d like to improve areas of your business but you aren’t sure where to start. You know the problem, you just don’t know the solution.
You’ve considered hiring consultants but you’re skeptical of the value they can provide. And you know you’ll have to pay them either way.
You’ve heard the bad experiences. Or maybe you’ve even had one yourself. If you fall into the latter category, the following content may sound all too familiar. We get it.
So, without further ado, it brings us (some) pleasure to present to you… the top 10 stereotypes of financial services consultants:
1. Jargon-schmargon
Financial services consultants love to use big words to impress (or really confuse) their clients. The smarter they sound, the smarter they must be, right? They’ll convince you the people on their team are heaps more intelligent than yours. Otherwise, why would you need them?
2. Copy + paste
Consultants don’t start from scratch like they promise. Instead they take the easy route, providing pre-packaged solutions they’ve used before, possibly with your competitors. They might even use ideas you gave them but polish them up to make them seem like theirs…
3. Talking without listening
Consultants act like they know the answers to a client’s problem before they’ve even met them. They assure you they know your company better than you do and tell you what you want to hear, not what you need to hear.
4. Charging you a lot just to tell you a little
You’ve probably heard it before: ‘A consultant will borrow your watch to tell you the time and then charge you for it’. And they’ll charge a premium for financial services clients specifically because of the impression the work is more complicated than others’. Sure you receive a lengthy slide presentation from the firm, but tangible results are nowhere to be found in it.
5. An ‘A-team’ delivers the pitch
Firms have an A-team sell the deal, a B-team set up the project and a C-team deliver it. The most experienced players sell you the dream, but you never hear from them again.
6. Methodology > creativity
Consultants rely on ticking boxes against a standard methodology instead of working creatively to achieve an outcome for the client.
7. They only look out for themselves
Contracts are filled with caveats and assumptions to cover their derrières, not yours. They’ve made sure any hiccups along the way become your problem, not theirs.
8. There is no collaboration
Consultants work in silos and only reveal the strategy to the client at the very end. Who has time to check in and get input anyway? They’ll just hope you like what they come up with in the end. If you don’t, check stereotype #7!
9. Consultants lack fresh thinking
Because large corporate firms often look like the big companies they’re consulting, there’s a lack of fresh thinking or real change happening. They’re limited by the same internal structures as their clients. Monkey see, monkey do.
10. Their main objective is to fill seats
Firms aim to hire as many consultants as possible, regardless of merit, because more people = more work. They’d rather do the work than do the work well.
The Challenger Consultants
Elixirr was founded in 2009 to bring something different to consulting and challenge the reputation the industry had developed. To demonstrate firms are still capable of delivering impactful and unique solutions to clients. To bring back the human element of the work that disappeared but remained as important as ever.
As consultants, we know our industry is no exception to bad habits. But we also recognize the importance of being able to look inwards and call ourselves out. By acknowledging industry shortcomings, we can actively work to address them.
At Elixirr, we do things differently. We’re the Challenger Consultants. Get in touch to see what we can do for you.



