It’s a curious thing, the allure of the “expert.” When faced with a thorny problem, particularly in an area where our own footing feels less than solid, the temptation to call in someone with a string of credentials and a compelling pitch can be immense. We crave solutions, and an expert, by definition, is supposed to have them. Yet, over a good few decades in the technology trenches, and coaching businesses through the often-turbulent waters of growth and change, I’ve developed a healthy, if not an absolutely essential, skepticism towards the generic pronouncements of the self-proclaimed expert.
I recall a particular Business Unit, let’s call them
"LogiStream Solutions," a solid team providing specialized software
for a rather niche segment of the logistics industry. They were profitable, had
a loyal customer base, but their organic growth had hit a plateau. The BU
manager, a bright and driven individual named David, was feeling the pressure.
Into this scenario stepped a consultant, a "Strategic Synergist" or
some such impressive title, armed with glossy brochures showcasing successes in
wildly different sectors – a consumer app here, a retail chain there. The
promise was grand: a revolutionary go-to-market strategy, leveraging
"next-generation paradigms" that would, apparently, unlock explosive
growth. The fee, naturally, was commensurate with the grandeur of the promise.
David was intrigued. His team was capable, but this
consultant spoke a language of certainty that was hard to ignore. When I sat
down with David, my approach wasn't to dismiss the consultant out of hand.
After all, I’ve learned a great deal from genuine specialists throughout my
career – the kind of deep, narrow expertise that comes from years of focused
effort, often nurtured within the rigorous environment of our universities, for
which I hold the utmost respect. The kind of expert who can dissect a specific
technical challenge in compiler design or a particularly knotty piece of
international tax law is invaluable. This, however, felt different.
My questions to David were simple, rooted in what a
physicist might call first principles:
"What, precisely, is the fundamental problem this strategy addresses
for LogiStream's customers, in their specific
slice of the logistics world?"
"What data do we have – from our own sales records, our
customer support logs, our win/loss analyses – that supports the assumptions
this strategy is built on?"
"Instead of a big bang, what small, low-cost experiments could your own
team devise and run in the next quarter to test one or two of these
'paradigms'?"
"How do these broad-stroke retail or consumer tactics translate to the
long sales cycles, the deeply entrenched relationships, and the regulatory
complexities that define your market?"
The "Strategic Synergist" had offered a
pre-packaged answer. The problem was, it wasn't necessarily an answer to
LogiStream's specific question. It reminded me of Richard Feynman’s profound
intolerance for what he termed "cargo cult science" – activities that
mimic the form of scientific inquiry without the underlying honesty and
rigorous self-criticism. Feynman, a physicist whose clarity of thought I’ve
long admired, understood that the first principle is that you must not fool
yourself, and you are the easiest person to fool. Experts, especially those
selling complex, hard-to-measure services, can sometimes inadvertently (or
advertently) help you do just that.
To their credit, David and his team decided to press pause
on the expensive engagement. Instead, they reallocated a small portion of their
budget and, more importantly, their team's intellectual horsepower. They dug
into their own data with renewed focus. They initiated a series of candid
conversations with a dozen of their longest-standing clients and a few who had
chosen a competitor. They didn't unearth a silver bullet. What they found were
a couple of specific, unarticulated frustrations their current offering didn't
fully address for a growing sub-segment of their clientele, perhaps those
operating across different regulatory zones in Europe and North America.
They then launched a modest, targeted initiative – not a
"revolutionary paradigm," but an enhancement to an existing module
and a series of very practical webinars addressing these newly understood pain
points. The result wasn't the "explosive growth" promised by the
consultant. It was, however, a tangible uptick in engagement from a key
customer segment, a couple of significant upsells, and, crucially, a much
deeper, internally-held understanding of their market dynamics. They had, in
essence, "earned" their insight and the subsequent modest, but very
real, growth. It wasn't outsourced; it was cultivated.
The paradox, as I see it, is this: the more acute the
problem, the greater the desire for an expert to provide a swift solution. Yet,
it's precisely in these moments that uncritical reliance on external
pronouncements can be most perilous. True expertise, particularly in the
nuanced world of business strategy or market engagement, is so often
context-dependent. It's "earned" through the iterative process of
trying, failing, learning, and adapting within that specific
environment. It's a secret your own team uncovers through diligent, honest
inquiry, backed by data, not a generic formula imported from elsewhere.
This isn't to say that all external advice is without
merit. Far from it. A fresh pair of eyes, particularly from someone with deep,
verifiable experience in a directly comparable situation, can
be incredibly valuable. But the responsibility for critical thinking, for
testing assumptions, and for owning the outcome, must always remain internal.
Outsourcing that core function is a path fraught with risk.
In the complex dance of running and growing a business,
particularly in the ever-shifting landscape of technology, a healthy dose of
skepticism isn't cynicism; it's a prerequisite for sound judgment. It’s the
filter that helps distinguish genuine insight from sophisticated-sounding
fluff. And more often than not, the most profound and actionable
"expert" insights are already present, latent within your own team,
waiting to be uncovered through rigorous, first-principles thinking and a
willingness to engage honestly with the data your own operations generate.
That, to my mind, is a far more reliable path to sustainable, long-term value.