Management Consulting
Management
Consulting
Briefing document
Client: Baker Hughes For this years’ Management Consulting Project, we are going to be advising Baker Hughes
(BH). BH is a leading energy technology company. BH designs, manufactures and services
transformative technologies to help take energy forward.
For more than a century, BH’s inventions have revolutionized energy. BH harnesses the power
of engineering, data, and science to redefine what's possible.
With operations in more than 120 countries, BH works in partnership with customers, wherever
they are, to deliver better outcomes. BH is proud that their people and businesses are part of
the fabric of the communities in which they work.
BH key values
BH’s people, planet, and principles value framework guide their responsibility to sustainable
operations and enable them to accomplish our business priorities. This framework has the
following elements:
People
• Increase diversity in leadership, our employee base, and our supply chain to reflect the
communities where we operate.
• Attract, equip, and empower the workforce of the future by investing in early leadership
development, supporting employee health and wellbeing, and creating opportunities for
the next generation of talent.
• Collaborate with organizations and on projects aligned with interests and needs of the
communities where we live and work around the globe.
2
Planet
• Reduce Baker Hughes' environmental footprint by minimizing emissions and waste
each year.
• Partner with customers to help reduce their environmental footprint. • Invent
technologies and invest in a portfolio of low-carbon products and services.
Principles
• Make every day a Perfect HSE Day—a day with no injuries, accidents, or harm to the
environment.
• Do the right thing always, delivering the best quality products, services, processes, and
technologies in the industry.
• Maintain ethical practices, as well as supply chains through a risk-mitigation
management approach across our global operations to ensure we are rigorous in
safeguarding human rights.
Market position
BH’s orders for the third quarter of 2019 were $7.8 billion, up 35% year-over-year and up 19%
sequentially. This is the highest orders quarter BH has seen since the second quarter of 2015.
Revenue for the quarter was $5.9 billion, down 2% sequentially. Year-over-year revenue was up
4%, driven by Oilfield Equipment and Oilfield Services, offset by declines in Turbomachinery
and Digital Solutions.
Operating income for the quarter was $297 million, which is up 10% sequentially and 5%
yearover-year. Adjusted operating income was $422 million, which excludes $125 million of
restructuring, separation and other charges. Separation charges in the quarter were $54 million.
Adjusted operating income was up 17% sequentially and up 12% year-over-year. The adjusted
operating income rate for the quarter was 7.2%, up 120 basis points sequentially and up 50
basis points year-over-year. Operating profit was $14 million, up $8 million year-over-year
Current situation: Health and Safety performance
In order to compete in the marketplace, BH deliberately focuses on continuous learning and
improvement. An area that requires permanent attention is BH’s Health and Safety
performance. The overall aim of this consulting project is to help BH improve its Health and
Safety performance. Health and Safety is not only a key BH’s value; it is also a key expectation
of their customers.
BH defines its Health and Safety performance as no injuries and work-related illnesses. BH
assesses its Health, Safety and Environmental (HSE) efforts with a specific measure known as
the ‘Perfect HSE Day’ metric. BH celebrates every workday they complete with no injuries,
accidents or harm to the environment. They have achieved 153 Perfect HSE Days in 2019.
They have also improved in all HSE performance metrics, including an employee injury rate of
less than half of our rate from just five years ago.
Multiple factors influence BH’s Health and Safety performance. However, BH believes that
leadership development is the most critical factor in continuing their cultural journey, centred on
zero incidents as an expectation, and not a vision or goal. To continuously improve their leaders’
3
development, BH has designed and implemented what it is known as the ‘HSE Leadership
Foundation Learning Series’. This leadership development programme has evolved over the
last few years and it is now a cornerstone for how BH continues to build leadership skills.
Across the globe, 3,331 leaders complete the HSE Leadership Foundation series facilitated by
165 trained HSE professionals.
The HSE Leadership Foundation Learning Series is a two-day interactive training and education
programme designed to raise awareness, create alignment and gain commitment to HSE
principles among our people leaders. Leaders have the chance to learn from each other what
works, and the activities equip them with the knowledge and tools to ensure HSE is part of their
day-to-day focus and activities.
Leadership engagements with employees have proven to be the single most effective means to
enhance BH’s HSE culture and performance. By engaging with employees one-on-one or in
groups, leaders can have candid conversations with their teams to explore and address
challenges and opportunities for continual improvement. The more employees feel heard and
are engaged, the more equipped and empowered they are to identify and proactively reduce
everyday HSE risks. During 2018, there were more than 39,000 leader engagements across the
company.
No effort to improve HSE performance can be completed without a focus on the human
element. Human performance is about what people do and how they do it. It is informed by a
company’s culture and applies not only to HSE, but also to every choice BH makes. What
people do is influenced by a range of process, social, organizational and psychological factors.
BH has developed strategies to reduce human error through increased awareness and
enhanced process design, building on the following efforts over the last few years.
BH is proud of its tradition of safety leadership and committed to sharing their successful
innovations broadly throughout its industry. BH received more than 55 industry recognitions in
2018, including the Centre for Offshore Safety’s coveted Safety Leadership Award.
BH’s key challenge and expectations
BH’s Health and Safety performance is linked to its operational performance. Although, BH has
demonstrated progress, there is still room for improvement. For BH, a key improvement action
is to update its HSE Leadership Foundations Learning series to enhance their leaders’
knowledge and skills.
Currently, there is an area of knowledge that BH believes can transform the way its leaders
work and significantly improve its HSE performance. BH would like to initiate a mindset change
in its leaders, raising their awareness of key complexity thinking ideas (applied to management).
BH recognises that large organisations are ‘complex systems’ (please go to http://bit.ly/2uhHtIi
for further information on this concept) and providing a healthy and safe environment for their
employees may require different managerial approaches to the ones currently used.
Complexity thinking is providing a set of conceptual tools that could help in the process of
shifting the way in which BH leaders think about safety. However, BH does not know how to
best translate these complexity thinking ideas into the practice of management and leadership.
4
More specifically, BH would like Cranfield’s students to help them understand what specific
training material could be designed to introduce their leaders to complexity thinking ideas. The
new training material will be incorporated to BH’s HSE Leadership Foundation Learning series.
BH vision is to develop a ‘complexity thinking’ mindset in their leaders.
BH leaders and their work
To give you an idea of what BH leaders do and how they do it, here is a brief description of the
way of working in a BH manufacturing plant located in Europe responsible for the design and
assembly of large gas turbines.
In this particular manufacturing plant, business objectives are achieved through a broad range of professional groups:
Group Key functions Product engineer Design products, develops technical drawings used for assembly
Manufacturing engineer Develops an assembly process and provides tools required
Mechatronic and
automation engineers Design, select, program robots used during the manufacturing process
Plant management Oversee overall performance of the plant at different levels of the organisation. From manufacturing cell leader to overall plant performance.
HSE Ensures compliance with procedures, identifies how people can get injured, introduces controls.
HR Manages recruitment of all roles, promotion, leadership development.
Supply chain Manage the flow of goods, selects suppliers, sources raw materials, oversees quality.
Quality Responsible for quality planning, assurance, control and improvement activities.
Competency
management
Manage competencies of the shop floor employees, provides or arranges training.
Sales Interact with customers, co-determine the demand for products.
Shop floor operators Responsible for assembly which includes using heavy tools, lifting heavy equipment, using tools generating heat and gas.
Corporate
representatives Responsible for aligning local processes and policies with the corporate
direction in order to standardise the efforts and optimise use of resources.
Maintenance technicians
Responsible for maintenance and repairs of machinery and equipment.
5
Machinists Responsible for programming and operating machines used for creating parts by e.g. mechanical abrasion.
Facilities Responsible for building management, from cleaning to leasing matters.
Finance Monitoring costs and revenue. Co-determines budgets.
IT Responsible for a range of aspects related to managing information and
technology, from issuing laptops, to managing databases to managing
servers. Contractors and
suppliers Represent their companies. They serve different roles and are present on
site for various durations. It may range from specialist engineering
consultancy, to temporary workforce, to machine maintenance, to builders
etc. They work at all level of the hierarchy.
Typical interior of a BH gas turbines manufacturing plant
Most of these professional groups are managed through siloed hierarchies even though all of
them dynamically interact with each other at different levels depending on their needs and
circumstances.
An oversimplified example of such dynamic may include installing a new machine on the shop
floor. In order to install a new machine, supply chain needs to work with mechatronic engineers
to determine features and requirements and then work with finance and site management to
determine the budget for capital expenditure. Facilities people need to be consulted to ensure
space in the building. HSE reviews various risks related to transportation, installation and
operation. They realise that there are no guards preventing injury and the space around the
machine would constrain movement. Therefore, they need to revisit the requirements jointly with
engineers and work with facilities to create more space. Operators and technicians have to be
trained how to operate the new machine relying on competency managers who have to design
new training jointly with engineers, HSE, suppliers and operators. Quality co-determines the
6
impact of the new machine on the defect rate of the product and introduces changes to the
quality assurance process which also needs to be taught to the quality assurers. Manufacturing
engineers need to update their procedures which are stored in the databases managed by IT.
Sales talks about the new capability to the customers and increase the demand for the product
which impacts HR that needs to recruit more workforce and supervision which in turn has
impact of facilities as the canteen is now overcrowded etc.
BH recognizes that popular management frameworks are static, linear and do not account for
non-linear dynamics changing over time. BH would like to find an easy way to teach leaders
about complex systems and practical implications of complexity thinking – in other words, taking
into consideration complexity thinking ideas, what could they do differently?
Consulting project
BH expects to receive a set of recommendations about new training material that could be
introduced in its HSE leadership development programme to explain its leaders how they can
apply complexity thinking ideas to their work.
To deliver this objective, you will…
1. Need to familiarise yourselves with the foundations of ‘accidents prevention’. Here you
have a set of documents recommended by BH that you can include in your knowledge
review of ‘accidents prevention’:
• http://bit.ly/2RHHSgI
• https://www.skybrary.aero/bookshelf/books/2437.pdf
• http://bit.ly/2tEdjyS
• https://www.hse.gov.uk/guidance/index.htm)
2. Need to understand the key ideas associated with complexity thinking. These ideas are:
• What is Non-linearity?
• What is Emergence?
• What is Self-organisation?
• What is Performance variability?
• What is Equivalence?
• What are Feedback loops?
• What are Constraints?
• …You could also focus on another concept considered key within Complexity
thinking
Here you have a couple of documents recommended by Cranfield faculty that you can
use to begin your knowledge review of ‘complexity thinking’:
• Reeves et al (2020) Taming complexity, Harvard Business Review, available at:
https://hbr.org/2020/01/taming-complexity
• Merali and Allen (2011) Complexity and systems thinking, available at:
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/292653679_Complexity_and_systems
_thinking
7
3. Pick ONE of these key complexity ideas and propose a set of recommendations for new
training material (i.e., ready-to-use slides, activities, debates, etc.) that can help translate
what this idea/concept means into simple, engaging, story-based explanations that
leaders can understand so they can improve their work and prevent accidents.
Remember, the overall aim of this project is to assist BH and its leaders in the
development of a ‘complexity thinking’ mindset.
Your typical target audience is a broad group of leaders, typically with an engineering degree,
responsible for managing manufacturing plants and drilling services. They have never heard of
systems and complexity. They are very practical, action oriented and time poor. They are likely
to quickly disengage if the content is academic, theoretical, conceptual or delivered using terms
they don’t understand.
Key deliverables
Further progress requires a new way of thinking. As a company, BH would like to continue being
a market leader in how it thinks about leadership, operations and safety. Although complexity
ideas have been around since 1960s, even the most progressive companies struggle with
explaining its premises to its people in a practical fashion. The results of this project will help BH
to refresh its HSE Leadership Training Series accounting for key characteristics of complexity
thinking.
Based on your consulting work, BH expects the following outputs or deliverables:
1. Team Presentation: Professionally designed presentation, which will be presented by the
consulting team on the last teaching day of the module. This presentation should last no
more than 10 minutes. The presentation needs to cover the following:
• Information about how the consulting project:
- How did you understand the BH challenge?
- What process/method have you followed to address their challenge?
- What key insights have you found based on the data collected?
- What recommendations do you propose? What training material will you
recommend about the selected complexity thinking concept for Baker
Hughes?
• This presentation should be accompanied by a professionally designed summary
report of no longer than 2500 words (excluding references and appendix) in which
the team fully explains the information contained in its PowerPoint presentation so
BH can better understand the knowledge captured in it.
2. A critical self-reflective essay reflecting on your management consulting learnings before,
during and right after the consulting project. Please see blackboard for further information
about this assignment. This essay will only be reviewed by Cranfield faculty.
- Client: Baker Hughes
- BH key values
- People
- Planet
- Principles
- Market position
- Current situation: Health and Safety performance
- BH’s key challenge and expectations
- BH leaders and their work
- Consulting project
- Key deliverables