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The Professional Service Firm50

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Transform white collar departments into "professional service firms" whose sole, powerful asset is knowledge.

Peters discusses making the most of presentations, working with outsiders on market analysis, how to imporve brainstorming meetings, how to develop relationships with clients and get the most out of them.

50 of Tom Peters's trademark insights on how to get the most our of your department.

212 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 1999

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Tom Peters

230 books312 followers

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Mark Lacy.
Author 6 books8 followers
July 26, 2016
Not everyone is going to like Peters' style, and I'm not sure I do either. But he had many important things to say in this book, and I found it very helpful. I also recommended it to people at work.
Profile Image for Lloyd Downey.
759 reviews
November 14, 2020
I was working on a major project for the Government, examining service exports and their potential, when Tom Peter's book.....In Search Of Excellence was still a major best seller. (Though I was informed that most of those "excellent" firms had not been able to maintain their "excellence"). Nevertheless Tom Peters managed to sustain himself as a management guru. (I think he initially started out with McKinseys). And this little book, I think, is part of a series of little books that Tom Peters wrote. (I have another titled "The Brand You"...which is written in very much the same "Rah Rah style as this current book). Nothing wrong with that, I guess...but maybe just slightly annoying and slightly "preachy". His basic point here is that the majority of jobs are now white collar jobs and whilst business has been active in seeking productivity improvements in manufacturing etc. they have been rather slow to adopt improvements in the white collar area.
He suggests that work can be transformed by approaching it in a different way. For example,
1.The Professional Service Firm (PSF) is well known for something and has a distinguishable approach to problems.
2. The PSF leaves a legacy/does work that matters.
3. A PSF isn't afraid of the word "sell" is proud of its capabilities and wants the world to know about them.
4. A PSF has a client list ....to die for ....and dumps dud clients.
5. A PSF is the "place to be"....a magnet for hot talent...hires COOL and pays accordingly.
6. A PSF provides stunning growth opportunities for energetic individuals.
7. A PSF is exciting/vibrant/rockin' cool.

He has a few mottos: Work can be beautiful; Take charge of your life: Make every project a wow!; Be distinct or extinct!
My observation (with a couple of McKinsey alumni in the family) is that he draws heavily on his experience with McKinsey and their mode of operations. And clearly, this is not a bad role model....though he does touch on the crushing pressure to perform on one and (mostly) all. But he doesn't really seem to explore the impact of this crushing pressure on families and personal relationships. And it seems to me that this is a fundamental oversight.
Perhaps by establishing his own business and developing his own PSF he has been able to have slightly more control over his own destiny...though my impression from reading his books is that he still operates under considerable pressure ...whether or not it is self imposed.
Overall, quite a nice little self-help/inspirational book which can be read very quickly and there are certainly some pearls there that each of us can use in our work or daily lives. And, Certainly, the average white collar department could boost their performance and satisfaction from adopting the strategies recommended here by Tom Peters.
Four and a half stars from me.
Profile Image for Joel Ungar.
415 reviews9 followers
May 2, 2020
21 years old and stands the test of time. Mostly.

This is a brilliant work. Some of it is a little dated, like the references to Andersen, but they were valid in 1999. This is going to be my guide to reforming my department at my CPA firm. Now I go back and slowly reread the first chapter (50 chapters), implement, and then read the next chapter. And the next.

And have a lot of fun along the way. Because my work matters.
Profile Image for JP.
1,163 reviews51 followers
May 18, 2013
Tom does again what he is known for... inspiring us to work differently... to make it mean something... to find clients (even if internal) who make us better, who are thought partners, who are revolutionaries. This is a book to pick up again and again for a short bit of inspiration or another idea to try.
Profile Image for Kiersten.
57 reviews11 followers
June 3, 2008
Loved it! More of a reference book then a read, but its got some great concepts.
Profile Image for Siim.
19 reviews3 followers
August 1, 2007
It was a short and great book. I got a lot of ideas about client servicing and account management.
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews

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