Booz Allen Hamilton

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Booz Allen Hamilton Inc.
Type Private firm
Founded 1914
Headquarters McLean, Virginia, USA[1]
Key people Dr. Ralph Shrader, Chairman & Chief Executive Officer[1]
Industry Management Consulting
Products Strategy Consulting
Technology Consulting
Revenue US$4 billion (FY2006)[1]
Employees 19,000,[1] in offices on six continents
Website www.boozallen.com

Booz Allen Hamilton, one of the oldest management consulting firms in the world, is a private corporation with headquarters in McLean, Virginia, and more than one hundred offices on six continents. Booz Allen is wholly owned by its approximately 300 officers. Dr. Ralph Shrader is Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the firm—the seventh chairman since the firm's founding in Chicago in 1914.[2]

Booz Allen's commercial business (now known as Booz & Company) competes with firms like McKinsey & Company, The Boston Consulting Group, Accenture Management Consulting and Bain & Company to work with leading corporations on projects involving strategy, operations, organization and change, and information technology.[3] Booz Allen's government business primarily competes with SAIC, IBM, and other systems integrators and defense contractors and serves global governments, agencies, NGOs, as well as nearly every part of the United States Government and military infrastructure.

Booz Allen's notable intellectual contributions include the HBS-honored OrgDNA framework,[4] the PERT management technique, and the product lifecycle theory. Since 1995, the firm also publishes "strategy+business", a magazine for business executives.

On May 17th, 2008 Booz Allen announced that it will be separating its two distinct businesses into two companies: one focusing on US Government contracting and the other focusing on commercial and international management consulting. The US Government business will remain Booz Allen Hamilton and will be majority owned by the Carlyle Group while the commercial and international firm will be known as Booz & Company and will continue to be owned by the commercial partners.[5]

Contents

[edit] History

"Booz Allen Hamilton traces its roots to Edwin G. Booz. A student at Chicago's Northwestern University in the early 1900s, Booz received a bachelor's degree in economics and a master's degree in psychology, upon completion of his thesis 'Mental Tests for Vocational Fitness.' In 1914, Booz established a small consulting firm in Chicago, and, two years later, he and two partners formed the Business Research and Development Company, which conducted studies and performed investigational work for commercial and trade organizations. This service, which Booz labeled as the first of its kind in the Midwest, soon attracted such clients as Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company, Chicago's Union Stockyards and Transit Company, and the Canadian & Pacific Railroad."[6]

[edit] Formation

After graduating from Northwestern University in Illinois in 1914, Edwin G. Booz developed the business theory that companies would be more successful if they could call on someone outside their own organizations for expert, impartial advice.[7] This theory developed into a new profession — management consulting — and the firm that would bear his name.

[edit] Early Years

"In 1940, the firm was hired to help the United States Secretary of the Navy with World War II preparations, a project that marked the start of a longstanding relationship with the United States Federal Government. Since then, Booz Allen has had a hand in several notable private and public engagements throughout its years, such as advising on the breakup of Ma Bell and helping organize the National Football League in the 1960s."[2]

[edit] Public Years

In 1970, Booz Allen went public with an initial offering of 500,000 shares at $24 per share. Trading continued through 1976.[8]

[edit] Organization

"Booz Allen is privately held, which allows it to consider long-range investments that companies beholden to shareholders might not be able to make, Gerencser said. With private ownership, the company can make investment decisions that pay off farther down the road than some of its competitors. 'As a managing director, I can put investments in place that may provide a return in four or five or six years,' Gerencser said, adding that, 'we can often place long-term and even risky bets.'"[1]

The firm was once public in the 1970s.[9], but the partners took the firm private again through one of the first management buyouts (MBO) to allow the firm to consider long-range investments that companies beholden to shareholders might not be able to make.[10] Time magazine named it the most prestigious management firm in the world,[11] with longstanding relationships with federal intelligence agencies, with current and former employees including former Director of Central Intelligence, R. James Woolsey, former CIA employee Miles Copeland, Jr., and former NSA Director Mike McConnell, who is now the second Director of National Intelligence.

[edit] Recruiting

The Booz Allen global footprint spans six continents including much of Europe, the Americas, the Middle East, Japan, Korea, and Greater China. Booz Allen recruits candidates from top and mid-tier universities, as well as from other corporations. The recruitment process is very inconsistent and is team dependent. In 2007, the firm had roughly 110,000 applicants and 1033 new jobs, which translates to less than 1% hire rate.[12]

[edit] Prominent Client Initiatives

[edit] Internal Revenue Service

Booz Allen was chosen in 1998 to help the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) modernize, and shed its dismal customer-service reputation. Booz Allen's team developed a strategy for the IRS to reshuffle its 100,000 employees into units focused on particular taxpayer categories: individuals, charities, businesses and so on. "We made some very dramatic changes in the way the IRS is organized," says Booz Allen Chief Executive Officer Dr. Ralph Shrader, an electrical engineering Ph.D. and 28-year company veteran.[13] Despite these confident words, number reports from the Government Accountability Office (GAO) have pointed to mixed performance results at IRS, and notably, poor management of its IT portfolio and its contractors.

[edit] New South Wales, Australia

In 1988, the newly elected Greiner State Government commissioned a report into the State Rail Authority (SRA) of New South Wales by American consultants Booz Allen Hamilton. The report, delivered in 1989 recommended widespread job losses, up to 8000, including the withdrawal of staff from 94 country railway stations, withdrawing services on the Nyngan- Bourke line, Queanbeyan - Cooma line and Glen Innes- Wallangarra line, the axing of several country passenger services (the Canberra XPT, the Silver City Comet to Broken Hill and various diesel locomotive hauled services) and the removal of sleeper trains from services to Brisbane and Melbourne. The report also recommended the removal of all country passenger services and small freight operations, but the government did not consider this to be politically feasible.[14] The SRA was divided into business units- CityRail, responsible for urban railways; CountryLink, responsible for country passenger services; FreightRail, responsible for freight services; and Rail Estate, responsible for rail property. Upon the formation of the business units in 1988, CityRail adopted a black and yellow 'L7' logo (later to become blue and yellow), and Countylink adopted its present blue and green 'Mountains' logo and livery.[15]

[edit] Notable Colleagues and Alums

Notability follows this general principle: Lead and direct some of the world’s largest corporations, government and other public agencies, emerging growth companies and institutions.[16]

[edit] Business

[edit] Politics and public service

[edit] Other

[edit] Criticisms and Controversies

[edit] SWIFT

In 2006 at the request of the Article 29 Working Group, an advisory group to the European Commission (EC), the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and Privacy International (PI) investigated the U.S. government's SWIFT surveillance program and Booz Allen's role therein. The ACLU and PI filed a memo at the end of their investigation which called into question the ethics and legality of a government contractor (in this case Booz Allen) acting as auditors of a government program, when that contractor is heavily involved with those same agencies on other contracts. The basic statement was that a conflict of interest may exist. Beyond that, the implication was also made that Booz Allen may be complicit in a program (electronic surveillance of SWIFT) that may be deemed illegal by the EC.[62][63]

[edit] Democracy Now

Another controversy related to some of the senior staff of Booz Allen (past and present) and related to its performance on some specific U.S. intelligence agency contracts was brought to light on 12 January 2007 in an interview conducted by Democracy Now! with Tim Shorrock,[64] an independent investigative journalist, and separately in an article he wrote for the Salon online magazine. Through investigation of Booz Allen employees, Shorrock asserts that there is a sort of revolving-door conflict of interest between Booz Allen and the U.S. government, and between multiple other contractors and the U.S. government in general. Regarding Booz Allen, Shorrock referred to such people as John M. McConnell, R. James Woolsey, Jr., and James R. Clapper, all of whom have gone back and forth between government and industry (Booz Allen in particular), and who may present the appearance that certain government contractors receive undue or unlawful business from the government, and that certain government contractors may exert undue or unlawful influence on government. Shorrock further relates that Booz Allen was a sub-contractor with two programs at the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA), called Trailblazer and Pioneer Groundbreaker, and then asserts two statements: that these programs reveal that many contractors are involved in various intelligence programs of which the media and parts of U.S. Government have now questioned the legality; and that the apparent (assertion made by Shorrock) unsuccessful nature of the programs reveals a lack of competence by both NSA and Booz Allen.[65]

[edit] Homeland Security

A June 28, 2007 Washington Post article related how a U.S. Department of Homeland Security contract with Booz Allen increased from $2 million to more than $70 million through two no-bid contracts, one occurring after the DHS's legal office had advised DHS not to continue the contract until after a review. A Government Accounting Office (GAO) report on the contract characterized it as not well-planned and lacking any measure for assuring valuable work to be completed.

According to the article,

A review of memos, e-mail and other contracting documents obtained by The Washington Post show that in a rush to meet congressional mandates to establish the information analysis and infrastructure protection offices, agency officials routinely waived rules designed to protect taxpayer money. As the project progressed, the department became so dependent on Booz Allen that it lost the flexibility for a time to seek out other contractors or hire federal employees who might do the job for less.

Elaine C. Duke, the department's chief procurement officer, acknowledged the problems with the Booz Allen contract. But Duke said those matters have been resolved. She defended a decision to issue a second no-bid contract in 2005 as necessary to keep an essential intelligence operation running until a competition could be held.[66]

[edit] References

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  8. ^ Booz Allen Hamilton Historical Timeline
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  10. ^ To counter scrutiny Booz Allen puts ethics first
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  15. ^ State Rail Authority of New South Wales
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  63. ^ Booz Allen Not An Independent Check On SWIFT Surveillance, September 27, 2006
  64. ^ Mike McConnell, Booz Allen and the Privatization of Intelligence, January 12, 2007
  65. ^ The spy who came in from the boardroom: Why John Michael McConnell, a top executive at a private defense contractor, should not be allowed to run our nation's intelligence agencies.
  66. ^ Costs Skyrocket As DHS Runs Up No-Bid Contracts: $2 Million Security Project Balloons to $124 Million, June 28, 2007

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] Footnotes

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