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Posted
3 hours ago, Lacessit said:

I have always enjoyed my work, and have been productive for several companies. I was interrupted at the peak of my productivity.

 

My encounter with the management consulting firm of McKinsey was without doubt a low point in my  life.

 

McKinsey is a global giant, with about 27,000 employees. Like law firms, the holy grail is to become a partner. Many ex-employees wear their association as a badge of honour. In my view, it should be a badge of shame.

 

McKinsey operates on a simple and fraudulent principle. It makes a presentation to the board or senior management of a target company, promising with its cost-cutting programs to improve the bottom line. From memory, the target was $180 million, with a fee of $18 million to McKinsey for their expertise. Most boards are hypnotised by the prospect of substantial cost savings. Such is McKinsey’s reputation, it would take a brave senior manager to reject their overtures.

 

McKinsey does not target small businesses, because those simply could not afford them, or be worthwhile. My company was a large and juicy target.

 

It sounds wonderful, except it is smoke and mirrors. Two to three years after McKinsey has swept through an organisation, no-one ever goes back to the cost savings they have claimed to measure whether they were achieved in reality.

 

 

A number of individuals were selected as team leaders. Declining was not an option. I was isolated in a demountable hut outside the Engineering Department for six months, with a 386 laptop issued by McKinsey for company. I was supposed to sit there and think of nothing but cost saving ideas. My only human contact during that time was a few minutes every day with a McKinsey facilitator. The rest of the time I spent staring at a computer screen, wishing I could be back at work doing what I did best – finding new insights, developing new methods , and solving plant and customer problems.

 

I regard that six months in the demountable hut as the most barren and wasted of my entire life. Not surprisingly in hindsight, I developed depression. My wife was completely unsympathetic, telling me to get on with it. To her, I was just a provider.

 

I went to see the Works Doctor, in despair. I suspect I was not the only person he was seeing affected by the madness of McKinsey. He forthwith prescribed doxepin, a classic tricyclic antidepressant. I was to be on that medication for the next 20 years, and it may have contributed to the benign prostatic hyperplasia I have now.

 

I was quite stressed, even with the anti-depressant in my system, because one of the cost savings forced on me by the program was a reduction of two people in my department. These were human beings reduced to a bottom line.

 

At the end of the six months, all team leaders were to make a presentation to the CEO, who had the reputation of a hatchet man.

 

The HR manager made his presentation before me. He achieved the required savings while adding four people to his staff, and was fulsomely praised

 

When my turn came, I was excoriated by the CEO for not doing enough, despite reducing the staff level by two people. When I pointed out the discrepancy between my presentation and the HR manager, he got quite angry and told me to stop being evasive. I was outraged by the unfairness of it all. It was only my sense of self-preservation that prevented me from telling him to shove his program up his @rse. Financial independence would have been a wonderful thing at the time.

 

If I owned a business, and a manager came to me wanting to bring in McKinsey or any other consultant, I would fire that manager on the spot. My logic would be any manager who needs someone else to tell him how to run a business is no manager.

 

When an organisation kills or injures a person physically, there is usually hell to pay. Organisations such as BHP, Exxon and BP have shelled out billions for the environmental damage they have caused. I am wondering how much mental damage McKinsey has initiated, and whether there will ever be a reckoning through a class action by an enterprising legal firm.

 

I suppose there were a couple of positive results from my six month sojourn in Siberia. I had a truckload of work waiting for me, with various clamourings for priority. I had come through fairly severe depression intact, with my medication reduced to the minimum level. Perhaps most importantly, I had realised my marriage was no longer sustainable, and it was only a matter of time before we split up.

 

I am in remission from three types of cancer. Being diagnosed with them was not the lowest points of my life.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Were they not the prototype for the consultants in Office Space?    

 

I have had to deal with them in several firms I worked for, total scum (although there is at least one of the big 8 (old number, I know due to consolidations etc.) accounting firms started operating in the same space and were just as slimy.   Sounds like Purse and Tounge.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted
3 minutes ago, Nick Carter icp said:

 

   Are you calling me a clunk ?

clunk

  1. 2.
    informalUS
    a stupid or foolish person.
    "don't let her see what a clunk I'm married to"

 

 

Also an onomatopoeia.

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Posted

I've been through times in my life that, at the time, seemed "awful."  In retrospect,, no big deal. I was just temporarily poor.

 

For example, my father supported my through undergraduate school, but stopped when I went to law school.  II guess he figured that was my problem.  Anyway, even though I had the GI Bill at the time and could use those benefits to pay for food and housing, the private school tuition was expensive, financial aid wasn't really a thing back then, and when I worked it was only part time.  So I was doing good to get through every month with just the bare necessities.  One time the starter went out on my VW Bug, and for a period of a few months, I couldn't afford to fix it.  When I parked, I had to find a parking spot on a hill. To start the car, I started it rolling down the hill and then popped the clutch.   

 

Anyway, I was healthy and mostly having fun, so I'd go back in a second if I could. 

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Posted
9 minutes ago, Nick Carter icp said:

 

   OK, Do you also think that its acceptable to throw things at people ?

(Apart from insults ,  that is )

 

 

You've never seen "The Life of Brian"?

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Posted
Just now, Will B Good said:

 

You've never seen "The Life of Brian"?

 

  Again , making a statement and putting a question mark at the end .

Oh I see, its a reference to the Life of Brian where they throw rocks at a blasphemer and Basil gets squashed by a huge rock .

  Basil was Julius Caesar salad  in the movie , if I remember correctly 

Posted
Just now, Nick Carter icp said:

 

  Again , making a statement and putting a question mark at the end .

Oh I see, its a reference to the Life of Brian where they throw rocks at a blasphemer and Basil gets squashed by a huge rock .

  Basil was Julius Caesar salad  in the movie , if I remember correctly 

 

Brian says....... "let him, who is without sin, throw the first stone".......THUD.

Posted
20 hours ago, The Cobra said:

what was your roughest or lowest time for you as a young adult,

When I was first stupid enough to believe a woman when she said that "she loved me" Only thing she loved was herself.

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Posted
1 hour ago, tjintx said:

He forthwith prescribed doxepin, a classic tricyclic antidepressant. I was to be on that medication for the next 20 years,

IMO antidepressants don't work. However they give the impression that work medics are doing something.

I was on antidepressants myself, but stopped when all they did was make me impotent.

 

Later, I was having a bad time at work and went to the health nurse. The only thing she wanted to do was put me on antidepressants. When I declined, she threw me out and refused to see me again.

I solved the problem by resigning. Best thing I did in years. Far too many bullies in nursing- and mainly from senior nurses/ managers.

Posted
19 minutes ago, JeffersLos said:

 

Remove the not. 🙂

  

   Attacking other people is not acceptable .

Aren't you supposed to be one of those nice lefty people ?

Also, unless you are a hypocrite , then you will have to accept other people throwing things at you , unless you should be able to do it, but others shouldn't be able to 

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Posted
4 minutes ago, Nick Carter icp said:

  

   Attacking other people is not acceptable .

Aren't you supposed to be one of those nice lefty people ?

Also, unless you are a hypocrite , then you will have to accept other people throwing things at you , unless you should be able to do it, but others shouldn't be able to 

 

You're talking nonsense. 🙂 

Posted

Separating from my wife last year was brutal, but the death of the first one has to slightly outrank it. One person I can still send a Christmas card to, one I can't.

 

And I turned down un-hot sex 4 times in 2024. It's just a matter of time until I fall into something else stupid.

 

"Nice lefty people" -we gotta lose that anvil around our necks.

 

Posted
2 hours ago, thaibeachlovers said:

IMO antidepressants don't work. However they give the impression that work medics are doing something.

I was on antidepressants myself, but stopped when all they did was make me impotent.

 

Later, I was having a bad time at work and went to the health nurse. The only thing she wanted to do was put me on antidepressants. When I declined, she threw me out and refused to see me again.

I solved the problem by resigning. Best thing I did in years. Far too many bullies in nursing- and mainly from senior nurses/ managers.

 

The quote was certainly not from me.

Posted
2 hours ago, Prubangboy said:

Separating from my wife last year was brutal, but the death of the first one has to slightly outrank it. One person I can still send a Christmas card to, one I can't.

 

And I turned down un-hot sex 4 times in 2024. It's just a matter of time until I fall into something else stupid.

 

"Nice lefty people" -we gotta lose that anvil around our necks.

 

 

   They are always going on about how bad and terrible everyone else , I was led to believe that they are perfect and never do anything wrong 

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Posted

25 years ago.A broken down alki brickie , 50 years old living at Mums.

Found Thailand in 2005 and never had a drink since.

I explain it to anyone who cares to listen that i was older when i first came here than i am now.

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Posted
6 hours ago, Nick Carter icp said:

 

  Again , making a statement and putting a question mark at the end .

Oh I see, its a reference to the Life of Brian where they throw rocks at a blasphemer and Basil gets squashed by a huge rock .

  Basil was Julius Caesar salad  in the movie , if I remember correctly 

 

Brian says....... "let him, who is without sin, throw the first stone".......THUD.

Posted
17 minutes ago, Will B Good said:

Worst or lowest part of your life ?

 

Probably tonight when I saw riclag had posted even more unadulterated drivel.......come back Bob.....all is forgiven.

5555555555555555

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Posted
20 hours ago, RSD1 said:

I think my low point was when I discovered AN and then read my first bob smith post. I will never forget that day and must live with it in shame until it's time for me to clock out. What a pity. 

He was a real piece of work. Thrilled he is gone and no longer raining verbal terror down upon this community. 

 

A quote comes to mind with regard to people of his kind. 

 

In shallow men the fish of little thoughts cause much commotion. In oceanic minds the whales of inspiration make hardly a ruffle.

 

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