The Professional Services Transformation Paradox #8 – Short-Term Revenue vs. Long-Term Capability

23. April 2026
Kategorien
Newsletter abonnieren

Professional services firms are built around revenue.

Revenue is visible, measurable, and immediate. It drives partner compensation, signals performance, and anchors decision-making across the firm. Every client won, every project sold, every hour billed translates directly into current-year outcomes.

Capability building works differently.

It requires investment upfront, often without immediate return, and pays off over years rather than quarters. New platforms, new offerings, new delivery models, and new capabilities take time to develop, time to scale, and time to translate into revenue. In the short term, they are a cost.

That difference creates a structural bias.

Firms are optimized to sell what they can deliver today, not to build what they will need tomorrow. When faced with the choice between immediate revenue and longer-term capability, the system naturally leans toward the option that improves current performance. Not because leaders do not understand the importance of investment, but because the economic model rewards what is realized now.

The effect is subtle, but persistent.

Investment decisions are framed as trade-offs against current-year performance. Capability building is delayed, scaled back, or re-scoped to fit within acceptable economic boundaries. Initiatives that require sustained commitment over multiple years struggle to maintain momentum, especially when leadership rotates and priorities shift.

Over time, this creates a gap.

The firm continues to grow, continues to sell, continues to deliver, but the underlying capability base evolves more slowly than the market. What looks like strong performance externally can mask a growing internal misalignment between what the firm is currently able to do and what it will need to do in the future.

This is where the tension becomes visible.

Markets move faster than capability development cycles. Technology evolves, client expectations change, and new competitors enter with different models. Firms that rely too heavily on existing capabilities can continue to generate revenue for a time, but they increasingly do so by stretching what they already have rather than building what they need next.

The partnership model reinforces this dynamic.

Compensation is tied to current-year results. Performance is evaluated annually. Leaders are measured on what they deliver within their tenure. In that context, long-term investments are always competing with short-term outcomes, and short-term outcomes are easier to justify.

This does not mean firms do not invest.

It means they tend to underinvest relative to what is required for structural change.

The result is a pattern that repeats across many firms. New capabilities are announced with ambition, but funded cautiously. Transformation programs are launched, but adjusted to protect current performance. Investments are made, but not always at the level or duration needed to fundamentally shift the trajectory of the business.

Externally, the firm appears active and evolving.

Internally, the pace of capability development remains constrained.

That is why the hardest part of building long-term advantage in professional services is not identifying what to build.

It is sustaining the commitment to build it.

Because unless the economic model allows firms to absorb short-term impact in exchange for long-term capability, they will continue to prioritize what is visible today over what is required tomorrow.

And over time, that gap becomes harder to close.


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.


I work with boards and executive teams on independent perspectives related to professional-services transformation, governance, operating models, platform economics, and the changing economics of professional-services firms.

If your leadership team is working through similar questions around ownership structures, governance alignment, investment pressure, or operating-model evolution, you may find my Future of Professional Services board sessions and Transformation Reality Review valuable. Feel free to reach out.

Henrico Dolfing

Tags

Das könnte Sie auch interessieren

How To Select a Good Project Manager for Your Large and Complex Transformation Project

14. Juni 2024

Most transformation programs do not fail in execution. They fail in selection. Long before the first milestone is missed, the trajectory is already set by one decision that is often treated as routine. The choice of the project manager. For a sponsor, this is not a staffing decision. It is a control decision. The project

Weiterlesen

How Your Rollout in Waves Can End in a Tsunami

14. November 2022

Multinational system implementations rarely fail because of technology. They fail because the rollout model collapses under its own operational reality. One of the most common triggers is a misunderstanding of what a rollout in waves actually implies. Most organizations believe they are reducing risk when they move away from a big bang deployment. In practice,

Weiterlesen

White Elephant Stampede: Case Studies in Policy and Project Management Failures

15. Oktober 2022

This month one of the book projects I have been part of has been published by Connor Court Publishing in Australia.  The book is titled «White Elephant Stampede: Case Studies in Policy and Project Management Failures«, and it examines the seemingly endless cavalcade of projects that fail to meet their objectives, cost more than expected and

Weiterlesen

Doing Something That’s Never Been Done

14. August 2022

Executives, project sponsors, project managers, and steering committee members can learn a lot from how some deep technology startups approach their projects. This isn’t true for all kinds of projects, but it is for every project that involves doing something that hasn’t been done before and has a high risk-reward profile. This isn’t another lean

Weiterlesen

Why Are Your Best People Not Working on This?

7. August 2022

Large organizations do not lose control of critical transformation programs because they lack capability. They lose control because they systematically keep their best people out of them. It happens again and again. The organization launches a multi-million ERP, CRM, HCM, or core banking program. The stakes are obvious. If it fails, it disrupts operations, damages

Weiterlesen

Don’t Forget SaaS Performance Testing!

7. Juli 2022

Most SaaS implementations do not fail because they lack functionality. They fail because they are too slow to use. That sounds trivial. It is not. Performance is one of the few factors that directly determines whether a system will be used at all. If users have to wait after every click, every search, every transaction,

Weiterlesen

Changing Technology Is Easy; Changing Behaviour Is Not.

2. September 2021

This is an article I have written for one of my clients. You can find the original article here.   Creating a modern workplace is key to digital transformation. If you’re embarking on such an initiative, remember that changing technology is easy, but changing behaviour is not. Begin with the end in mind, ask what you

Weiterlesen

The Biggest Challenge of Postmodern ERP – Cloud Integrations

2. Mai 2021

ERP never died. It changed form. When Gartner coined the term “enterprise resource planning” in 1990, it described a very specific idea. One integrated system to run the core of the business. Finance, HR, manufacturing, procurement, all connected through a single data model and a single process backbone. For a long time, this model dominated.

Weiterlesen

Create a Lighthouse to Drive Your Transformation

13. März 2021

I’m a firm believer in transformation through delivery. In my experience real change cannot be implemented without a vehicle that is used to drive it through the organisation and crash through existing barriers.  Transformation is far more than just deploying new technologies for the sake of it. A genuine competitive advantage can only be gained

Weiterlesen

Going Live Too Early Can Be Worse as Going Late

15. Februar 2021

Large transformation programs rarely collapse without warning. They collapse because the warning signs are ignored. In post-mortems, the pattern is almost always the same. The project team knows the system is not ready. The risks are visible. The defects are known. The dependencies are fragile. Nothing is hidden. And yet, the decision is made to

Weiterlesen