One of the least discussed challenges in large transformation programs is the illusion of standardization.
From the outside, global professional services firms look highly uniform. One brand, one set of services, one methodology, delivered across countries in a way that suggests consistency and control. Audit, tax, consulting, deals all appear to operate within the same system, which naturally leads to the assumption that transformation should follow the same logic. If the firm is global, the transformation should be global as well, built on standard platforms, standard processes, and standard operating models.
That assumption is where the problem starts.
Because behind that global brand sit businesses that are fundamentally different from each other in ways that matter operationally and economically. They differ in scale, in client portfolios, in leverage models, in regulatory constraints, in cost structures, and ultimately in how they make money. Two firms delivering what looks like the same service on paper can operate with entirely different economics in practice, shaped by local market conditions, pricing pressure, talent models, and compliance requirements.
Transformation does not run on branding. It runs on those underlying economics.
This is where global transformation programs begin to break down. What works in one country often creates friction in another, not because the design is wrong in isolation, but because it assumes a level of uniformity that does not exist. A workflow designed for a high-leverage market can collapse in a lower-leverage one. A pricing model that fits one regulatory environment becomes unworkable in another. A global process that looks efficient at the centre can easily become a bottleneck at the edge.
The result is a predictable pattern.
Programs start with the ambition of global standardization, driven by the promise of efficiency, scalability, and control. As implementation progresses, local realities push back, forcing exceptions, adjustments, and workarounds. Over time, either the program doubles down on standardization and creates operational friction, or it accommodates local variation to such an extent that the global model loses its meaning. In both cases, the original intent is diluted.
This is the real tension: global consistency versus local economics.
And it is consistently misunderstood as a technology problem.
In reality, it is an operating model design problem. Technology simply exposes the choices that have not been made. A global system will either enforce a standard that does not fit the business, or it will be configured into complexity to reflect local differences, often ending up as neither truly global nor truly local.
The hard part is not choosing standardization or variation. The hard part is deciding where each one actually creates value.
That requires a much more explicit view of the business than most transformation programs are willing to confront. Where do differences in economics genuinely require different ways of working, and where are they simply the result of historical choices that could be standardised without loss? Which parts of the operating model benefit from scale, and which parts need to remain locally optimised to remain viable?
Without those decisions, global transformation becomes an exercise in compromise.
You get standard platforms that are heavily customised, global processes that are inconsistently applied, and operating models that look aligned on paper but behave differently in practice. The organisation appears more integrated, but the underlying complexity remains, often amplified by the attempt to force coherence on top of it.
That is why so many large transformation programs in professional services stall in the same place. Not because the technology fails, but because the economic reality of the business has not been designed into the transformation.
Unless you make explicit choices about where standardization truly matters and where variation is structurally required, you do not get a global transformation.
You get a fragmented compromise that carries the cost of both.
This article is part of a series exploring the tensions at the heart of the Professional Services Transformation Paradox.
The paradox is simple. Firms that excel at transforming their clients often struggle to transform themselves. Deeply embedded incentives, partnership structures, and legacy operating models create internal resistance to the very change they advocate externally.
Each article in this series focuses on a specific contradiction. Structural, economic, or cultural. These tensions are not side effects. They sit at the core of how decisions are made, how transformation is executed, and why many programs underdeliver.
Most transformation failures do not start with strategy, technology, or vendors. They start with governance, incentives, and blind spots at board level.
If you are currently overseeing a critical transformation, I offer a focused board-level diagnostic to identify where your program is at risk before those risks become visible in financials and delivery.
If this is relevant, get in touch.