Walt Bogdanich (Author)
Walt Bogdanich is an investigative reporter for the New York Times
and is one of the US's most-honoured journalists. He has been
awarded three Pulitzer Prizes and four George Polk Awards for his
investigative journalism. He previously produced stories for 60
Minutes, ABC News and the Wall Street Journal in New York and
Washington. He has a BA in political science from the University of
Wisconsin and a master's degree in journalism from Ohio State
University. He lives in Port Washington, NY.
Michael Forsythe (Author)
Michael Forsythe is an investigative reporter for the New York
Times. At Bloomberg he was part of a team that won the George Polk
Award in 2013. Forsythe is a veteran of the US Navy. He has a BA in
international economics from Georgetown University and a master's
degree in East Asian studies from Harvard University. He lives in
New York City.
Hard-hitting ... damning ... If you think what management
consultants do is to dress up common sense in jargon and flog it as
vision to credulous executives, you are, according to [Bogdanich
and Forsythe], greatly underestimating their impact
*The Times*
A masterful work of investigative journalism ... to unearth
conflicts of interest, corruption, hypocrisy and strategic blunders
that read like a prosecutor's indictment ... The fact that neither
regulators, the public, nor most of McKinsey's employees knew about
these sordid episodes ... is a testament to the authors' prowess as
investigative reporters ... superb
*Washington Post*
Deeply reported ... The portrait this book creates is one of a
company chasing profits, spreading the gospel of downsizing and
offshoring, its leaders virtually unmoored from any guiding
principles or moral code ... a clear and devastating picture of the
management philosophy that helped drive the decline of a stable ...
middle class over the last 50 years'
*The New York Times*
Hypocrisy, avarice, ridiculous PowerPoints, aiding and abetting the
world's polluters and drug companies. Every page made my blood boil
as I read about McKinsey's flawed reasoning and the vast profits
made from ethically dubious work for governments, polluting
companies and big pharma
*Joseph E. Stiglitz, Nobel Laureate, author of The Price of
Inequality*
'A lengthy and damning charge sheet ... makes you so angry you want
to chuck rocks at its offices ... the evidence the authors winkle
out is astonishing ... What sustains you are the authors' eye for
detail and killer quotes. If you want to know why top pay for US
executives has risen to a record 350 times that of the average
worker, look to McKinsey
*Sunday Times*
A highly informed, fascinating read
*The Guardian*
A harrowing account of decades of dishonourable exploits
*Economist*
New York Times reporters Walt Bogdanich and Michael Forsythe's
devastating investigation into the consulting firm uncovers a story
of secrecy, delusion and untold harm. ... The book's scrutiny - and
measured sense of outrage - is overdue and, you hope, only the
beginning
*Observer*
With McKinsey's deep reach into business and government around the
world, it is inevitably and correctly a focus for discussion on
what modern corporations are for ... That this internal turmoil has
come to light is testament to the depth of sourcing of journalists
Walt Bogdanich and Michael Forsythe [whose] reporting of these and
other controversies has intensified questions over the firm's
ethics ... The debate ... is intensely uncomfortable for McKinsey's
leadership'
*Financial Times*
In government and the private sector, the influence of McKinsey is
difficult to overstate. Walt Bogdanich and Michael Forsythe
penetrate the firm's vaunted culture of secrecy to expose the
malign ways in which McKinsey's 'scientific management' ends up
impacting all of our lives. Panoramic, meticulously reported and
ultimately devastating, this is an important book
*Patrick Radden Keefe, author of Empire of Pain*
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