Talk:McKinsey & Company/Archive 2
Ownership
edit"McKinsey & Company is a privately owned management consulting firm ... ." Do we have any further information on this? Does partnership also entitle one to a share of ownership? Are shareholders necessarily partners? Is there a larger "private boss" or corporate owner who would have the final word over and above the managing director?
- I'm not sure how openly the Firm discusses this, but only people employed at the Firm are allowed to own shares, and then only upon invitation by the other shareholders. There are restrictions as to how many shares any one individual can own, and the shares are not transferable. In practice, there are three levels of shareholdership: associate principals, principals, and directors. The managing director is a director. He/she is elected by the other directors and functions as a "first among equals" with very little formal power beyond the support of the various committees. All shareholders must sell back their shares to the firm at book value when they enter a retirement window, die, or leave the Firm. It's all very restricted. --Leifern 20:40, 9 February 2006 (UTC)
- Associate Principals do not own shares in the Firm. McKinsey itself is incorporated, so "shares" quite literally refers to shares in a corporation. Whether this is just a background register os the share register actually gets updated every year I don't know — Preceding unsigned comment added by Dorfl68 (talk • contribs) 14:59, 4 March 2011 (UTC)
McKinsey Foundation for Management Research
editThis appears to be a grant and prize giving organization, presumably attached to McKinsey. I cant seem to find any real detail though, anyone got anything? Justinc (talk) 13:03, 14 March 2011 (UTC)
I have added a multiple issues tag to the top of the page
editTo explain why, I'll quote a discussion one user and I were having about this pagespace:
- "How would you suggest I handle a situation like this? A Wikipedia administrator informally disclosed an intense real-life negative COI/bias about a company. However, he didn't stick to the Talk page, but instead has made edits that paint a very reputable company as "shadowy."
- I'll request you more closely identify the party or parties involved and the edits you judge as painting. I could make some assumptions based on my reading of the pages, but I want to be sure we're talking about the same situation and circumstances.
- User ProhibitOnions has revealed a clear bias and was heavily involved in the article a few years ago. Other neutral editors also got involved. For example, the article states
- "journalists and writers have had difficulty developing fully informed accounts of mistakes which McKinsey employees may have made."
- McKinsey's Investment Office is "secretive and low-profile"
- Stuff like not discussing client situations or disclosing fee structures are under "Criticism" even though these are routine business practices and a standard of professional conduct.
- User ProhibitOnions has revealed a clear bias and was heavily involved in the article a few years ago. Other neutral editors also got involved. For example, the article states
- Some of these are pretty overt, but others are more complex. IMHO bullets 1 & 3 are just patent junk, but #2 is at least based on one blogger's criticism of some complex, IRS-approved tax arrangements for which the investment office was involved. But it's an example of a complex scenario involving multiple bias editors where I could be required to sort things out with a potentially confrontational editor with admin rights. Of course, Prohibit hasn't even touched the article in years... King4057 (talk) 09:11, 9 March 2012 (UTC)
- I'd start by placing {{citation needed}} tags at the end of any questionable statements. In a BLP, such uncited assertions would be immediately actionable, and in this case, I tend to think several uncited assertions violate our pillar of neutrality. I wouldn't concern myself with the editor or editors; instead I would focus on the pagespace. "Furthermore, knowing that a competitor has hired McKinsey has historically been strong motivation for other companies to seek McKinsey's assistance themselves." Really? Who said so? That's a pretty egregious violation of OR unless one could cite it with multiple sources. Let us start our mentoring process by trying to do the right thing in this case, and see what other editors say. BusterD (talk) 13:35, 9 March 2012 (UTC)"
- Some of these are pretty overt, but others are more complex. IMHO bullets 1 & 3 are just patent junk, but #2 is at least based on one blogger's criticism of some complex, IRS-approved tax arrangements for which the investment office was involved. But it's an example of a complex scenario involving multiple bias editors where I could be required to sort things out with a potentially confrontational editor with admin rights. Of course, Prohibit hasn't even touched the article in years... King4057 (talk) 09:11, 9 March 2012 (UTC)
For the record, the italicized words above are my responses to User:King4057. This comes in the context of his request for mentorship as a paid editor, and from our discussion to determine whether he and I would be a good fit in such an arrangement. I'd like input from other editors about what has been discussed above. Did I do the right thing by adding the template at the top of the page, and do other editors agree with my placement of cite needed tags? I'll take the liberty of notifying User:ProhibitOnions we're discussing edits the user made. BusterD (talk) 14:16, 9 March 2012 (UTC)
- I was coming at this as an example where diplomacy skills could be needed and apologize if our discussion comes off as combative. I'll add as a disclaimer of sorts that some of the article text currently marked [citation needed] really does just need a citation, while other areas have a citation that doesn't support the article text. In some instances the tone isn't encyclopedic, but there are facts it's based on. I'm working with McKinsey on a set of discussion points that I hope will foster a quality, detailed discussion. I have a COI with McKinsey, so will stick to Talk pages and sandboxes. User:King4057 (COI Disclosure on User Page) 15:52, 13 March 2012 (UTC)
- Sorry for showing up late to the party. Not sure what I've missed. Just wanted to say that I'm happy to help as well. I think we have a great process in place to fix this page -- let's put everything in talk pages, hammer it out, and then make changes to the main page as necessary.
- Also, I'm okay with having the "multiple issues" tag up, but think we should work quickly to get it to the point where we can take it down. Don't want to keep it up there longer than, say, a month.
- Finally, good luck with the mentor-mentee stuff! Sounds like fun.
- My2011 (talk) 18:24, 14 March 2012 (UTC)
- I'd also like to join the discussion and clean up process. I like My2011's approach that for controversial issues, we discuss first, gain consensus and then make changes. While I agree that tags should not stay up any longer than they have to, we can't put any arbitrary time limit on it. A month is fine as a goal, but sooner or later than that is also OK. It should stay up as long as it needs to. I also agree with BusterD that we should focus on current article and not worry about someone did in the past......At first glance it appears to me that the article has some neutrality issues. But I'd like to look at the article from the top down. I'll start the first thread below. I look forward to working together.-- — Keithbob • Talk • 17:25, 6 April 2012 (UTC)
- :-D great, let's get going! My2011 (talk) 18:22, 6 April 2012 (UTC)
- Sorry for the delay My2011. I was soliciting for a second opinion on my neutrality, but we might as well have the discussion here. I've added my comments below on the Galleon scandal.
- Below is my best take at a neutral and accurate set of facts on the Galleon scandal, but I appreciate help by more impartial editors. I added a fresh COI disclosure. My hope is we can collaborate to bring the article up to B or C class. I just saw the updates and apologize for upsetting the top-down flow. I had been working on this offline unaware of the proposed plan and was shooting for the hard stuff first. User:King4057 (COI Disclosure on User Page) 02:30, 8 April 2012 (UTC)
I take exception to the accusations of "clear bias" made against me above. At the time I edited the article, it had clearly been written by McKinsey insiders, and gave an overly positive impression of the firm. Among other things, I added several counter-examples to balance things out. The three examples stated above are hardly inaccurate, and the phrasing made it clear that some criticisms of McK can be leveled against all consulting firms. ProhibitOnions (T) 09:09, 6 June 2012 (UTC)
Organization section
editI'm not sure the lead properly summarizes the article, but I'd like to work on the article first and get it right, then go back and re-summarize the lead as needed. So I'll put aside my concerns on the lead for now :-)
- Is this sentence (below) editorializing or is does it have a source? If so, can someone quote from the source to support the text below? The block quote in the article says the company is like an "academic organization".
- Current article text: "McKinsey & Company, while formally organized as a corporation, functions as a partnership in all important respects"
- Propose we remove: "curently Dominic Barton". If we want to say who is the MD, than make a sentence and put it in the administration section.
- "Its managing director (currently Dominic Barton) is elected for a three-year term by the firm's other senior partners."-- — Keithbob • Talk • 17:50, 6 April 2012 (UTC)
- Hi Keithbob! Here's some quick googling -- I don't have time today to work on this article, but feel free to suggest changes:
- "McKinsey is a partnership": http://www.mckinsey.com/locations/swiss/faq/
- "McKinsey is organized as a corporation": http://www.sec.gov/divisions/corpfin/cf-noaction/mckinsey011105-exa.pdf
- where would you prefer putting "currently Dominic Barton"?
- thx, My2011 (talk) 18:18, 6 April 2012 (UTC)
Thanks MY, for locating these sources. Even so, the current sentence seems a bit like editorializing or WP:OR (combining two sources and drawing a conclusion)to me. It appears to create doubt about how the organization is run, when in reality there is no conflict or unorthodox corporate structure. I think it would be more accurate to say something like "MC is a corporation owned and administrated by more than 1,000 partners around the world." Are you OK, with a sentence like that? -- — Keithbob • Talk • 17:25, 7 April 2012 (UTC)
- Ok, I see all the issues being discussed here. Shall we take it one sentence at a time? For the first sentence, how about: McKinsey is a self-governing partnership[1] formally organized as a corporation.[2]
- This would cut out the editorializing "in all important respects" in the first sentence and make it not appear more confusing than it needs to be per Keithbob's note, though it will still need more explanation. User:King4057 14:03, 30 May 2012 (UTC)
- Yes, that's the phrase that bothers me. Thanks!-- — Keithbob • Talk • 15:16, 29 July 2012 (UTC)
- I haven't had a chance to dig into it yet, but I've been advised by McKinsey that some of the information under Organization is now outdated and there are likely reliable sources to update it with. User:King4057 (COI Disclosure on User Page) 02:30, 8 April 2012 (UTC)
- OK, if there are reliable secondary sources than we can certainly include those. Let us know what you find. Thanks.-- — Keithbob • Talk • 20:35, 8 April 2012 (UTC)
- I haven't had a chance to dig into it yet, but I've been advised by McKinsey that some of the information under Organization is now outdated and there are likely reliable sources to update it with. User:King4057 (COI Disclosure on User Page) 02:30, 8 April 2012 (UTC)
Notable current and former employees section
edit- Propose we add to this list of notable former employees: David H. McCormick co-Chief Executive Officer at Bridgewater Associates and the former Under Secretary for International Affairs within the United States Department of the Treasury.
- Propose we move this entire section to the bottom of the article as it breaks up the flow of the written text. Lists traditionally go at the bottom of articles.
- Propose we move the list of "curent" partners to the Organization/administration section. It seems awkward having a list of former and current employees under one heading and current admins are important whereas alumni are not so important and should go lower down the page.
-- — Keithbob • Talk • 17:50, 6 April 2012 (UTC)
- The section is awkward to me too. Move it to wherever you wish. The reason there's some confusion between current and former is that senior partners emeriti are formally retired, but continue to draw resources from mckinsey (office, phone, secretary, etc.). So the boundaries between alumni and current is blurry. If you want to split it up, remove Dominic Barton and Michael Patsalos-Fox and keep the others; change the heading to "notable alumni." David McCormick is fine to add. Just my 2c. My2011 (talk) 18:21, 6 April 2012 (UTC)
- Since there seem to be no objections, I have gone ahead and made those changes. Done-- — Keithbob • Talk • 02:15, 10 April 2012 (UTC)
- Keith, I think you lost Ron Daniel, Ian Davis, Rajat Gupta and Anil Kumar in the move. Was this a mistake? If so I can just add them back. Thx My[2011] (talk) | 21:59, 3 May 2012 (UTC)
- Hey, I updated this section with Gupta+Kumar+Tom Peters, who I know are notable, and left out Daniel+Davis (from my above comment), who I'm not sure. Just fyi. This should be a noncontroversial edit. My[2011] (talk) | 01:18, 18 May 2012 (UTC)
- Since there seem to be no objections, I have gone ahead and made those changes. Done-- — Keithbob • Talk • 02:15, 10 April 2012 (UTC)
Controversy
editAs discussed above, I have a financial COI with McKinsey & Company in that they’ve recruited me to help them navigate through Wikipedia and COI Best Practices. I’d like to help improve the McKinsey article through collaboration with neutral volunteers better qualified to be impartial, especially in controversial areas.
Galleon Scandal
editI’d like to contribute some detailed information and reliable sources on the Galleon scandal as it relates to McKinsey.
Bulleted cited information for consideration of including in the article
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17 References as cited in the bullets
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References
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This also offers a lot of detailed clarifications on some items already in the article. For example, that David was “approached” rather than “involved”, that Gupta was allegedly involved in the Proctor and Goldman leaks after leaving McKinsey, and so on.
There are a lot of details related to McKinsey we can add to get all the facts out there, but McKinsey is also just one of many parties of some relevance to the scandal. I feel the current article has some general information about the scandal that may be better placed improving the stub on Operation Perfect Hedge with a “See main article."User:King4057 (COI Disclosure on User Page) 15:46, 8 April 2012 (UTC)
- Thanks for taking the time to assemble this information for our consideration. When I have more time I'd like to look through the sources and then comment further. Cheers!-- — Keithbob • Talk • 02:18, 10 April 2012 (UTC)
- There's a lot that I want to write about this. What's the best way to present it to you? Bullet form? Point by point? so much writing, so little time! :) MY[2011] (talk) | 23:42, 11 April 2012 (UTC)
- Do you mean about McKinsey specifically or the Galleon scandal in general? I'm a prolific bulleteer myself and that would make it easy to compare notes. User:King4057 (COI Disclosure on User Page) 15:09, 12 April 2012 (UTC)
- Sorry -- I meant as a response to this section. Will try to do it this weekend. :) hope that isn't too late. take care! MY[2011] (talk) | 18:06, 12 April 2012 (UTC)
- No problem. RE being too late - on the contrary that's very prompt! I'll check in on Monday and combine the article, your bullets and my bullets on the Talk page. User:King4057 (COI Disclosure on User Page) 00:38, 14 April 2012 (UTC)
My2011's response
editUser:King4057: Thanks very much for your hard work in putting together these points. I've separated my response -- and of course there may be many other responses by many other people -- into two sections: "passive" concerns and questions with COI in general, and "active" responses (both general and specific) to your suggested edits. Please don't take anything in either section too personally: it's just me trying to provide the most useful pushback as I can, and to represent everyone fairly.
User:Keithbob: Would love your perspective on these.
- Nice detailed response. Where should I put my comments? Re: COI, all the point you make are true but given Wikipedia's archaic system for dealing with concerns from individuals and corporations about being accurately and fairly represented, what else can they do except what King is doing? The same incongruity exists in many disputes on Wikipedia. Some editors work on Wikipedia full time while others just come once in a while. Guess who usually wins those debates? So we just have proceed with what we have. -- — Keithbob • Talk • 22:18, 19 April 2012 (UTC)
- Agreed, I just hate the imbalances. I just worry about keeping everything fair and unbiased. Put comments wherever, or maybe start a new "====" section, or instead indent off my "point by point" table? My[2011] (talk) | 00:37, 20 April 2012 (UTC)
- Looks like there's plenty of hands in the pot from volunteer editors more qualified to be impartial. Sincerely appreciate the civility and AGF. I'll wait until updated copy is posted in the article space and just pop in if anything jumps out at me. Meanwhile, I'm working on the History & Organization sections offline and will post updates when I have a solid draft. User:King4057 (COI Disclosure on User Page) 23:46, 23 April 2012 (UTC)
- I agree with the points made by My2011 in the Point by Point section.-- — Keithbob • Talk • 02:05, 1 May 2012 (UTC)
Concerns with COI
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I've never dealt with a COI editor before, much less one who makes substantive and thoughtful changes (as your table certainly is!). Here are my concerns about the potential imbalances in this process (with any COI, not you):
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Concerns with table
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1) I'm confused why you would want to add MORE detail to this section.
2) It's not focused enough on McKinsey For the purposes of my comments below I don't care about Operation Perfect Hedge. So in the following (point-by-point) section I'm going to be aggressive about taking out stuff that seems irrelevant, or not focused on McKinsey as an institution and organization. You'll see some "not relevant" etc. I have also tired to be extra careful in representing all parties when you talk about third parties other than McKinsey -- though (see point above) it's hard to know what their actual wishes are, as their side is not represented (only McKinsey's is). 3) Article spread You seem to be relying heavily on some articles (like citation 4); I'd love to see more variety. 4) PR-speak Some of the points feel like corporate spin. 5) Synthesis (optional) "The Galleon scandal" incorporates Rajat Gupta, Anil Kumar, and David Palecek. I'm not sure dealing with them sequentially is the logical way to go about it, since it's over the same time among highly interconnected parties. But this is an optional point. |
Point-by-point comments
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In January 2010, former McKinsey partner Anil Kumar pleaded guilty[1][2] to providing insider information to Raj Rajaratnam, then head of the Galleon Group hedge fund.[3]
Anil Kumar had been pitching McKinsey’s consulting services to the Galleon Group, when Rajaratnam made a private consulting agreement with Kumar,[4] violating McKinsey policies against outside consulting deals.[4]
To avoid detection by McKinsey, Kumar followed Rajaratnam’s instructions to setup a Swiss bank account for a shell company in Geneva.[4]
Kumar soon realized the consulting Rajaratnam was after was inside information about some of his clients at McKinsey and felt obligated by his financial payments to provide them.[4]
The Galleon scandal was embarrassing for McKinsey,[1][3][4] for whom integrity and protecting client confidentiality is a major premise of the business.[5]
McKinsey was not accused of any wrongdoing.[6][7][8] Kumar broke McKinsey’s confidentiality policies[4] in the incident.
Several years after stepping down as McKinsey managing director in 2003, Rajat Gupta joined the boards of Goldman Sachs and Proctor & Gamble, among others. In October 2011, prosecutors and the SEC charged Gupta for allegedly sharing insider information from board meetings with Rajaratnam.[6][9]
During Raj Rajaratnam’s trial, a wiretap recording showed he and his brother had tried to approach recently deceased McKinsey consultant David Palecek. His widow claims he was approached, but refused to be a part of the incident.[10][11]
McKinsey responded to the Galleon scandal by launching an independent inquiry, keeping partners and staff informed, reassuring stakeholders, tightening procedure,[10] and performing an external review of its values and practices.[3]
No hard evidence has suggested the scandal has had an impact on the McKinsey brand,[6][9] but there is speculation that it will have an impact even 10 or 20 years down the road.[3]
Other than the 2 former McKinsey employees involved, over 60 people have been charged in relation to the Galleon insider trading scandal.[12][13][14][15]
The investigation, known as Operation Perfect Hedge,[16][13] expects to make over 100 additional arrests in the next 5 years.[12][17][14]
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Phew!! All done. MY[2011] (talk) | 00:19, 17 April 2012 (UTC)
- Thanks for the thorough review My2011. I think I have implemented your feedback in the below revised. A few notes:
- I found that I used citations excessively. At one point the same citation was used twice in the same sentence. So I just trimmed them back.
- I put that "McKinsey and Kumar" were pitching for Galleon Group's business, since the article also goes into depth about Kumar's involvement.
- I added a few things from the current article and around Gupta's use of a McKinsey phone
- Thanks for the thorough review My2011. I think I have implemented your feedback in the below revised. A few notes:
- Let me know if you have any questions. My Talk page is always open as well if you have questions about my COI. User:King4057 (COI Disclosure on User Page) 23:10, 2 May 2012 (UTC)
Revised Galleon scandal
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Former McKinsey executives Anil Kumar and Rajat Gupta were among those charged in Operation Perfect Hedge for allegedly sharing insider trading information with then Galleon Group hedge fund manager Raj Rajaratnam. McKinsey was not accused of any wrongdoing,[3][4] however the scandal was embarrassing for McKinsey, for whom integrity and protecting client confidentiality is a major premise of its business.[5] Former senior partner Anil Kumar pleaded guilty in January 2010.[6][7] McKinsey executives and Kumar had been pitching McKinsey's consulting services to the Galleon Group, when Kumar and Rajaratnam reached a private consulting agreement, violating McKinsey's policies against outside consulting deals.[8] Kumar also broke McKinsey's confidentiality policies.[8] During Raj Rajaratnam's trial, a wiretap recording showed he and his brother had also contacted recently deceased McKinsey consultant David Palecek, saying he was "a little dirty."[9][10] His widow said he was approached, but refused to be a part of the incident.[10] After stepping down as McKinsey's managing director in 2003, Rajat Gupta joined the boards of Goldman Sachs and Proctor & Gamble, among others. In March 2011, the SEC charged Gupta for allegedly sharing insider information from these board meetings with Rajaratnam.[11][12] Before McKinsey severed all ties with Gupta as a result of the incident,[13] he had the title of "senior partner emeritus" as a former McKinsey managing director. At least twice, Gupta used a McKinsey phone to call Rajaratnam and had access to other perks as a senior McKinsey alumni.[14] Gupta countersued the SEC. In August 2011. Both Gupta's and the SEC's suits were dropped.[15] In October 2011 the SEC filed charges again. Gupta surrendered to the FBI on criminal charges on October 26, 2011 and the SEC filed a civil complaint based on the same set of allegations. The cases are ongoing. Gupta has maintained his innocence.[16][17][18] After the scandal McKinsey performed an independent review of its policies and procedures.[19] There is no evidence of any damage to McKinsey's brand. The firm's revenues grew 10% during the same period, but its long term impact remains unknown.[9][11]|}
Referencesedit
Office LocationseditI have moved the office locations section to the bottom of the article as it breaks up the content and is distracting to the reader. If anyone objects I ask that they please discuss here first before reverting my move. While I appreciate that someone took a lot of time to assemble all those nice flags, it is not a useful format and does not conform with WP:MOS which prefers prose over lists. I feel that it also gives WP:UNDUE weight to a minor part of the article ie that the company has dozens of locations all over the globe. It is my opinion that offices should be reduced to a few sentences of prose and included in the Organization and Administration section. Thoughts? Comments anyone?-- — Keithbob • Talk • 02:05, 10 April 2012 (UTC)
The first international office was opened in London in 1959.[3][4] Other offices in the Netherlands, Germany, Italy, France and Switzerland were opened in the 1960s.[5] The firm also has offices across Asia, Australia, Africa, South America and the Middle East.[1]
Done-- — Keithbob • Talk • 22:12, 19 April 2012 (UTC)
Request editedit
I would like to request the following be added under a new "Office Locations" section under Organization per the discussion above, where we discussed replacing the prior exhaustive list with something more succinct and historic. User:King4057 18:11, 22 June 2012 (UTC) McKinsey & Company has about 100 offices in over 50 countries.[1] Offices in Chicago, Los Angeles and San Francisco were established in the 1940s.[5][6] The first international office was opened in London in 1959.[3][4] Other offices in the Netherlands, Germany, Italy, France and Switzerland were opened in the 1960s.[5] The firm also has offices across Asia, Australia, Africa, South America and the Middle East.[1]
Talk page cleanupeditThere seems to be a time constraint -- or an impending snowstorm of viewers -- so we should get the talk page into good shape so we can iterate on what has to be done during next week (which will be very high profile) etc. I archived talk content before 2011. What's important or left to do on the main page? My[2011] (talk) | 01:34, 18 May 2012 (UTC)
History questionseditThere are a few points in the history section that I am unclear about:
I'm also look at some more general problems in the article : the rather frequent use of adjective, for example. DGG ( talk ) 22:35, 20 May 2012 (UTC)
Draft HistoryeditI have attached a draft history section at: Talk:McKinsey & Company/McKinseyHistory for further discussion and improvement. My intention isn't to request immediate implementation, but just to provide a dump of information to make the section more complete and specific. I find that reliable sources have extreme POVs on McKinsey (both positive and negative) and relied heavily on three fairly comprehensive sources: a negative one, a neutral/academic one, and a positive one among others. I'm happy to help out wherever asked to show where information is in an article, provide context, etc. There are several discussion points top of mind:
User:King4057 18:45, 30 May 2012 (UTC)
My[2011] (talk) | 19:23, 27 June 2012 (UTC)
King, I have more problems than I thought with your draft history section: 1) It's too long. The existing section is 350 words. Yours is five times longer (1800 words). 2) It's biased. No history of an organization over 100 years old is completely devoid of failures. The closest you come is one line about a "culture clash" in 1989. 3) It's poorly sourced. Many sources are incorrect or missing. (Also, I don't believe Vault a reliable source.) 4) It appears to contains nonpublic information, such as McKinsey's budget for knowledge management. 5) Undue weight is given to early history. The section on twenty years (1920-1930) is 9 paragraphs, and forty years (1960-1990) is only 3 paragraphs. I'll make some comments on the draft history section itself (at Talk:McKinsey & Company/McKinseyHistory) and you can see the comments by looking at my diffs. Thanks, My[2011] (talk) | 00:48, 27 July 2012 (UTC)
If they are that notable and important then I think we should list them word for word and put them in quotes to avoid plagiarism and to let the reader know WP is not editorializing on this point. Will that work? Here's what the source says:
Request Editedit
After having been
InfoBoxedit
According to the extensive article I've been reading, McKinsey's leaders were called "Managing Partner" until 1956. When the firm incorporated they were called "Managing Director." I believe their titles should be "Managing Director Emeritus" rather than "Senior Partner." Senior partners are elected to the role of managing director. Gupta presents an exception. Since McKinsey has broken their ties[4] it's probably not accurate to call him "emeritus" rather than "former." My2011 will know the context here. The updated infobox would look like this. User:King4057 15:23, 30 May 2012 (UTC)
The managing director is elected from the other directors. Thus when he steps down he becomes just a director again. When any director retires, he becomes director emeritus. Director and senior partner mean the same thing, so are interchangeable. (Ron Daniel stepped down in the 80s and called himself “director at McKinsey” in a 2004 Harvard bio. Presumably he hadn’t retired yet? [wow]) Thus every person on your list — including Gupta — carries the title “Senior Partner Emeritus and former Worldwide Managing Director.” So just put dates by their names, as follows: Dominic Barton thanks, My[2011] (talk) | 07:21, 6 June 2012 (UTC)
Parking loteditI have removed the following content which has been challenged and tagged citation needed since March 2012. No sources have been provided so I am 'parking' it here. If sources are found it can be added back into the article.
Healthcare Surveyedit
This is me again (changed my username). I've been working with McKinsey to come up with our best effort at a fair depiction of the healthcare survey issue (first bullet under the Criticisms header). Of course it’s difficult to neutrally cover an issue with strong opposing viewpoints with a conflict of interest, so we’d appreciate feedback from impartial editors. You can see the original side by side with the proposed here. I believe this version is much more neutral and complete than the current, but would love feedback and any bold improvements from impartial editor(s). Corporate 23:51, 12 November 2012 (UTC)
OK, here is my suggested draft which is now shorter than the original version, now in place. Of course my version is open for discussion and change as usual. Cheers! -- — Keithbob • Talk • 20:15, 15 November 2012 (UTC)
Thanks for your understanding; for any further request, can I please ask that you are more specific. ie, ideally following a "replace X with Y" model. Propose specific text and citations as you would suggest it be incorporated into the article.. Feel free to post further requests for specific edits. Thanks. Shaz0t (talk) 23:42, 18 November 2012 (UTC)
Lead too short tageditLead does not adequately summarize the article. It seems to paint an overly positive picture of the company, despite the lengthy "Criticisms" section. I am very unfamiliar with the company, so I thought I would tag the article to start a discussion on how to improve it. EvergreenFir (talk) 06:39, 8 January 2014 (UTC) History sectioneditAs previously disclosed, I have a potential conflict of interest with McKinsey & Company. I authored the History section a year or two ago. But, as often happens as I get started on a new article, it started out as a single section I was dumping everything I could find sources for and I'd like to refine it a bit more. Also, the current History section is missing the challenges McKinsey faced when competitors sprouted up in the '70s which appears to be a substantial element in their history. I've put together a proposed draft that has a simpler structure, is a little more concise and better written, uses a stronger variety of sources, offers a stronger balance, etc. at: There is some content "missing" from the proposed draft that I hope to re-introduce in other sections, but except for some of the commentary at the very bottom of the current History section, I believe it is all positive stuff that shouldn't create any COI problems. I'm not sure how to alleviate the fact that it is difficult to compare the current article to the proposed - please let me know if there is any way I can make it easier. CorporateM (Talk) 18:39, 15 April 2014 (UTC)
OrganizationeditFollowing the format used previously for the History section, I've put together a proposed draft of a "Structure" sub-section that would be the first sub-section of the Organization section, replacing the content there currently. McKinsey's structure is very unique and it requires a bit more explanation than normal. I've put together the proposed material at User:CorporateM/McKinsey for consideration by an impartial editor, which - like before - has bold red text annotating the current version. There are also some notes there on some of the content in the current Organization section that is properly sourced content that would just be better placed somewhere else. CorporateM (Talk) 07:05, 22 April 2014 (UTC)
Miscedit
I'd like to suggest some heavy trims and re-structuring that should reduce the number of sections and get us more organized, while cleaning out some of the content that is cited to primary sources inappropriately, original research, or highly mis-representative of the actual sources, etc. Then I'll continue building up the article from there with more neutral content working top-down and getting to the controversies last, which I hope we can merge into the article eventually. Let me know if this is too much stuff to handle at once!
Here's my thoughts:
I am surprised that there is not more use of Dangerous Company, although the book is dated it is a useful source. All the best: Rich Farmbrough, 09:06, 20 May 2014 (UTC).
Recruiting and management sectionedit
Currently the article has a recruiting section and a compensation section, which both contain a lot of original research, junk sources, off-topic information, or sources that do not actually support the article-text (some citations don't even mention McKinsey at all). As before, I have put together a document at User:CorporateM/McKinsey for review and consideration by a disinterested editor. It contains an annotated version of the current article-text, as well as the proposed version, so they can be seen side-by-side. If there is anything I can do to make it easier to review the proposed changes, let me know! CorporateM (Talk) 00:19, 26 May 2014 (UTC)
More contentedit
I have put together some more first-draft content at User:CorporateM/McKinsey for consideration. This includes sections on the firm's influence, culture and reception for addition to the Organization section. It also includes a re-write of the Environmental section, which currently relies heavily on primary sources from environmental advocates like Greenpeace. The proposed is more balanced and uses proper sources. As before, it's just a first draft and I hope once a decent version of the entire article is in place, we'll be able to look at some fine-tuning, GAN-prep and figure out the best article-structure. I know the volume of content/sources is overwhelming (it's a bit overwhelming for me too). CorporateM (Talk) 17:26, 20 June 2014 (UTC)
Next roundeditI've prepared draft Publishing, Consulting Services and Notable works sections at User:CorporateM/McKinsey. These sections would also find new homes for most (maybe all) of the content in the "Issues" section, avoiding creating a dedicated section for controversies. This is an immense body of work to review on a company with a very complex reputation. I'm sincerely appreciate of your time taking a look. My suggestion to user:Cullen328, user:Edge3, user:Guy Macon or anyone else that takes a look is that we can do them one section at-a-time if that's easier. I have no expectation of bringing the page up to GA over-night. CorporateM (Talk) 19:32, 3 July 2014 (UTC)
PublishingeditA note on the proposed Publishing section - it's very long and most of the books described in it have their own articles. I think ideally we could trim it down by about a paragraph, however, I was edging on the safe side to avoid the appearance of marginalizing controversies or omitting criticisms. CorporateM (Talk) 13:41, 8 July 2014 (UTC)
Some cleanupeditI wanted to suggest some additional cleanup of the article, which would trim back several excessive section titles, remove unsourced or redundant content and help cleanup the page a bit. I know this can be rather tedious with my suggesting edits on the Talk page, but I'm very appreciative of everyone's help! Here are my comments regarding some proposed cleanup:
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- ^ "McKinsey & Company on Forbes' America's Largest Private Companies list". November 16, 2011. Retrieved 2012-04-13.
- ^ "McKinsey & Company Swiss Office - Key Facts". Retrieved 2010-07-02.
- ^ Mckinsey.com
- ^ "America's Largest Private Companies" Fortune, November 3, 2010
- ^ Gapper, John, "McKinsey model springs a leak", The Financial Times
- ^ "Our People", About Us, McKinsey & Company, retrieved July 5, 2014
- ^ a b "McKinsey & Company". Forbes. Retrieved July 5, 2014.
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: More than one of|work=
and|newspaper=
specified (help) - ^ Client Service, McKinsey & Company, retrieved July 5, 2014