by Corinne Gangloff
April 18, 2019
Cleveland, OH, April 18, 2019 — Revenues for management consulting services are forecast to advance 4.7% per year in nominal dollars to 2023, according to Management Consulting Services: United States, a report recently released by Freedonia Focus Reports. Providers of management consulting services are expected to benefit from gains in nonresidential fixed investment, in turn propelled by continued growth in consumer spending and increased business profits after taxes. Companies will continue to use these profits to invest in new projects, which will spur demand for consulting to advise on these projects and improve market outcomes.
Clients will also be incentivized to spend on consultant services due to ongoing challenges and opportunities, such as cybersecurity, intensifying international regulations, data privacy, the advancement of internet-of-things devices into the workplace, big data, and strained global supply chains. Clients will continue to rely on consultants to create and implement solutions to these complex challenges, supporting demand. However, faster increases will be constrained by competition from internal corporate resources, as company officers face a choice between hiring consultants and using company personnel.
These and other key insights are featured in Management Consulting Services: United States. This report forecasts to 2023 US management consulting services revenues in nominal US dollars. Total revenues are segmented by service in terms of:
To illustrate historical trends, total revenue, the various segments, and industry data (employer firms, establishments, and employment) are provided in annual series from 2008 to 2018.
This report represents employer and nonemployer revenues. With the exception of actuarial consulting services, the discrete consulting segments include the provision of advice and implementation thereof. This report excludes industries such as private equity, portfolio management, investment advice, professional and management development training, executive search, and market research. Also excluded are environmental and other scientific and technical consulting services (e.g., agricultural, economic, and security consulting).
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