Arthur D.Little

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Arthur D.Little Arthur D. Little 1 Arthur D. Little Arthur D. Little Type Private Company Industry Management consulting Founded 1886 (formally incorporated as ADL in 1909) Headquarters 35 offices in 20 countries Key people Ignacio Garcia Alves, Global CEO Products Management consulting services [1] Employees 1,000 [2008 data] Website [www.adl.com www.adl.com] Arthur D. Little is an international management consulting firm originally headquartered in Boston, Massachusetts, United States, and formally incorporated by that name in 1909[2] by Arthur Dehon Little, an MIT chemist who had discovered acetate. Arthur D. Little pioneered the concept of contracted professional services. The company played key roles in the development of business strategy, operations research, the word processor, the first synthetic penicillin, LexisNexis, and NASDAQ. Today the company is a multi-national management consulting firm. History The roots of the company were started in 1886 by Arthur Dehon Little, an MIT chemist, and co-worker Roger B. Griffin (Russell B. Griffin), another chemist and a graduate of the University of Vermont who had met when they both worked for Richmond Paper Company. Their new company, Little & Grifffin, was located in Boston where MIT was also located. Griffin and Little prepared a manuscript for The Chemistry of Paper-making[3] which was for many years an authoritative text in the area. The book had not been entirely finished when Griffin was killed in a [2] The Arthur D. Little Inc. building at 30 Memorial laboratory accident in 1893. Drive in Cambridge, Massachusetts, near MIT, which opened in 1917. (photo 2009) Little, who had studied Chemistry at MIT, collaborated with MIT and William Hultz Walker of the MIT Chemistry department, forming a partnership, Little & Walker, which lasted from 1900 to 1905, while both MIT and Little's company were still located in Boston.[2] The partnership dissolved in 1905 when Walker dedicated his full time to being in charge of the new Research Laboratory of Applied Chemistry at MIT.[2] Arthur D. Little 2 Little continued on his own and formally incorporated the company, Arthur D. Little (ADL), in 1909.[2] He conducted analytical studies, the precursor of the consulting studies for which the firm would later become famous. He also taught papermaking at MIT from 1893 to 1916.[4] In 1916 ADL was commissioned by the Canadian Pacific Railway to do a survey of Canada's natural resources.[5] In 1917, the company moved to a building of its own, the Arthur D. Little Inc., Building, at 30 Memorial Drive on the Charles River next to the campus of MIT which had moved to Cambridge from Boston in 1916.[2][6] In November 1953, ADL opened a forty acre site for their Acorn Park labs in West Cambridge, Massachusetts, near Arlington, Massachusetts, which is quite a distance from MIT.[6] Entrance to 30 Memorial Drive ADL building (photo 2009) In 1981, ADL produced the European Commission's first white paper on telecommunications deregulation, having completed the first worldwide telecommunications database on phones installed, markets, technical trends, services and regulatory information.[5] It also helped privatize British Rail, generally regarded as one of the most complex privatization exercises in the world. By 2001, Arthur D. Little had reached its peak. But, a new management team had badly mismanaged the company's core business, had engaged in manipulation of the Memorial Drive Trust, and attempted a sale of the Technology and Product Development business. The ADL Board of Trustees replaced this management team, but the damage had already been done, and Arthur D. Little had to file chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in 2002 before being bought by Cerberus Capital Management [7] At an auction in 2002, Paris-based Altran Technologies bought the Arthur D. Little brand name and financed a management buyout of the non-US offices. In 2006 Richard Clarke, the CEO (who led Arthur D. Little following purchase by Altran) stepped down and Michael Träm was appointed as Chief Executive Officer. On 14th November 2011, Dr. Träm resigned as ADL CEO as ADL prepared a management buyout from the Altran group. He left ADL shortly after.[8] The MBO was completed on 30th December 2011 with the majority of ADL directors becoming partners. The firm will be led by a newly elected global CEO, Ignacio GARCIA ALVES, who was also the leader of the MBO team. [9] Since 2001, Arthur D. Little has successfully rebuilt its core practices in Oil & Gas, telecommunications, automotive and manufacturing, and chemicals. Arthur D. Little continues to be very active and recognized for its expertise at the crossroad of Technology, Innovation, and Strategy. It has been ranked as one of the top management consulting firms. Arthur D. Little ranked 29th in the 2009 US Vault ranking and 13th in the European one.[10][11] Arthur D. Little publishes a bi-annual thought leadership collection called PRISM.[12] Country offices • Austria • France • Malaysia • Sweden • Belgium • Germany • The Netherlands • Switzerland • China • Italy • Portugal • United Arab Emirates • Croatia • Japan • Saudi Arabia • United Kingdom • Czech Republic • South Korea • Spain • United States Arthur D. Little 3 Competitors ADL most often competes directly for contracts with A.T. Kearney, Bain & Company, Booz & Company, the Boston Consulting Group, Monitor Group, McKinsey & Company Notable current and former employees Business • Bruce Henderson, founder of the Boston Consulting Group • Charles Koch, Chairman and chief executive officer, Koch Industries • Royal Little, founder of Textron, Inc. • Dr. Devendra Singh, strategist • Sam Malin, co-founder and CEO of Madagascar Oil • H. Donald Wilson, ADL lead consultant to and first president of LexisNexis database • Dipl.-Ing. Philipp Hess, Geschäftsführer (Managing Director) HANS HESS AUTOTEILE GmbH • Al Angrisani, Angrisani Turnarounds, LLC • William J. J. Gordon and George M. Prince, creators of synectics. Politics and public service • Merrill Cook, former member of the United States House of Representatives from Utah. • Glen Fukushima, advisor to U.S. President Bill Clinton • James M. Gavin, US Army Lieutenant General, World War II veteran, Commander of the 82nd Airborne Division, and later US Ambassador to France • David Brown [13], Chief Executive IChemE (Institution of Chemical Engineers) Other • Karl P. Stevenson, Arthur D. Little's President and Chairman of the Ad Hoc Committee on Chemical and Biological Warfare that in 1950 expedited the creation of Camp Detrick's Special Operations Division that consolidated chemical and biological warfare projects in one location.[14] • Winnett Boyd, engineer • Fischer Black, economist • Philip Chapman, Australian-born American astronaut • Peter Glaser, inventor of the Solar power satellite • Raymond Hainer, chemist and mentor of Donald Schon • David Levy, inventor • Pamela Low, developed the flavored coating for Cap'n Crunch cereal • Donald Schön, academic • Peter Scott-Morgan, pioneer of techniques to reveal the hidden reality of how organizations and society behave • Jack Treynor, economist • Bernard Vonnegut, atmospheric scientist • Jean E. de Valpine, CEO of Memorial Drive Trust Arthur D. Little 4 Noteworthy publications • Deschamps; Nayak, P. Ranganath (1995). Product Juggernauts: How Companies Mobilize to Generate a Stream of Market Winners [15]. Boston: Harvard Business School Press. ISBN 0-87584-341-7. OCLC 31330407. • Public Finance Balance of Smoking in the Czech Republic, 2001 • Roussel; Saad, Kamal N.; Erickson, Tamara J. (1991). Third Generation R & D: Managing the Link to Corporate Strategy [16]. Boston: Harvard Business School Press. ISBN 0-87584-252-6. OCLC 22596604. • Scott-Morgan, Peter (1994). The Unwritten Rules of the Game: Master Them, Shatter Them, and Break Through the Barriers to Organizational Change. McGraw Hill. ISBN 0-07-057075-2 References [1] "Arthur D. Little - About Us" (http:/ / www. adlittle. se/ about-us_se. html) [2] Scatter Acorns That Oaks May Grow: An Arthur D. Little Exhibit (http:/ / libraries. mit. edu/ archives/ exhibits/ adlittle/ history. html), Massachusetts Institute of Technology, The Institute Archives and Special Collections, 2009-08-25, [3] Little, A.D.; Griffin, R.B., "The Chemistry of Paper-Making, together with the principles of general chemistry; a handbook for the student and manufacturer" (http:/ / books. google. com/ books?id=IihDAAAAIAAJ& printsec=frontcover), New York : Howard Lockwood & Co., 1894. [4] Report: "On the Making of Silk Purses from Sows' Ears," 1921 (http:/ / libraries. mit. edu/ archives/ exhibits/ purse/ ), Massachusetts Institute of Technology, The Institute Archives and Special Collections, 2009-08-25, [5] "ADL History Timeline" (http:/ / www. adl. com/ fileadmin/ timeline/ timeline. html) - ADL [6] Photographs: Early Days/30 Memorial Drive, Cambridge/Arthur D. Little/Acorn Park, Cambridge (http:/ / libraries. mit. edu/ archives/ exhibits/ adlittle/ photographs. html), Massachusetts Institute of Technology, The Institute Archives and Special Collections, 2010-03-18, [7] Glater, Jonathan (2011-6-02). "Arthur D. Little Plans Bankruptcy Filing" (http:/ / www. nytimes. com/ 2002/ 02/ 06/ business/ arthur-d-little-plans-bankruptcy-filing. html). NY Times. Retrieved 2012-7-26. [8] Altran website "The Group signed, on November 1st, 2011, a termsheet for an MBO concerning the disposal of Arthur D. Little due to be finalised by the year-end" (http:/ / www. altran. com/ uploads/ tx_lpaltran/ Altran_20111102_CP_EN_01. pdf) [9] [http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20120102005030/en/Arthur-D.-announces-successful-completion-Management-Buy-Out
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