Arthur D. Little is an international management consulting firm originally headquartered in Boston, Massachusetts, United States, founded in 1886 and formally incorporated in 1909 by Arthur Dehon Little, an MIT chemist who extended the applications of cellulose acetate, especially its use as artificial silk. 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, SABRE, and NASDAQ.

History

thumb|left|Arthur D. Little's eponymous founder

thumb|The Arthur D. Little Inc. building at 30 Memorial Drive in Cambridge, Massachusetts, near MIT, which opened in 1917.

thumb|Entrance to 30 Memorial Drive ADL building

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 & Griffin, was located in Boston where MIT was then located. Griffin and Little prepared a manuscript for The Chemistry of Paper-making which was for many years an authoritative text in the area. The book had not been entirely finished when Griffin was killed in a laboratory accident in 1893.

In 1917, the company, originally based at 103 Milk Street in Boston, moved to its own building, the Arthur D. Little Inc., Building, at 30 Memorial Drive on the Charles River next to the new campus of MIT, which had also relocated from Boston to Cambridge. The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1976.

In November 1953, ADL opened a 40-acre site for its Acorn Park labs in west Cambridge, Massachusetts, about 6 miles (10 km) from MIT. The Memorial Drive Trust, a tax-exempt retirement trust for the benefit of its employees, was set up.

Selected projects

In 1911 ADL organized General Motors' first R&D lab, leading to the formation of the firm's dedicated management consulting division, and the birth of the management consulting industry.

In 1916 ADL was commissioned by the Canadian Pacific Railway to do a survey of Canada's natural resources.

In 1961, Arthur D. Little launched the Arthur D. Little Management Education Institute, an accredited management education program to train general managers from developing countries. Following a structural reorganization it was renamed Hult International Business School

In 1968 ADL designed the NASDAQ stock exchange systems for London and Tokyo.

In 1980, 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. At an auction in 2002, TIAX LLC, formed by Kenan Sahin, acquired the assets, contracts, and staff of Arthur D. Little's U.S. Technology & Innovation business. Paris-based Altran Technologies bought the non-U.S. assets and brand name of Arthur D. Little.

A group of partners led a management buyout from the Altran group in 2011. It was completed on 30 December 2011 with the majority of ADL directors becoming partners and shareholders. A small number of senior principals, as well as the CFO and COO, also became shareholders. The company was reestablished in the US in 2016. It has appeared on the Forbes list of "America's Best Management Consulting Firms" every year since then.

Controversy

Bhopal disaster

In 1987, ADL claimed that sabotage was likely the cause of the Bhopal disaster, which resulted in the death of thousands. ADL's investigation was funded by Union Carbide, the company that owned the chemical plant responsible for the chemical disaster.

Phillip Morris-funded study on the economic impact of smoking in Czech Republic

In 2001, a Philip Morris-funded ADL study concluded that smoking can help the Czech economy Phillip Morris issued an apology following the report's publication.

Publications

Books

Global reports and studies

  • Twice a year, Arthur D. Little publishes its latest thinking on strategy, technology and innovation in its corporate magazine Prism.
  • The Annual Arthur D. Little - Exane BNP Paribas report which has provided in-depth analysis of the telecoms sector since 2001
  • Media Flow of Funds 2017 : Consolidate, Diversity, or Perish, which is the most recent in a multi-year study assessing the digital shifts in the content industry and the associated shifts in value along the industry ecosystem.
  • Telecoms & Media Flagship Report 2017 : Major strategic choices ahead of TelCos: Reconfiguring for value which assesses how digitalization will impact telecommunication operators' configuration.
  • The Future of Urban Mobility Study (2014 version in cooperation with International Association of Public Transport) which is a comprehensive global urban mobility benchmarking report
  • The Global Innovation Excellence Study which benchmarks innovation performance is published every 2–3 years and is in its 9th iteration
  • Socioeconomic Effects of Broadband Speed

Notable current and former employees

;Business

  • Al Angrisani, Angrisani Turnarounds, LLC
  • William J. J. Gordon and George M. Prince, creators of synectics.
  • Bruce Henderson, founder of the Boston Consulting Group
  • Charles Koch, chairman and chief executive officer, Koch Industries
  • Royal Little, founder of Textron, Inc.
  • H. Donald Wilson, first president of LexisNexis database
  • Merrill Cook, former member of the United States House of Representatives from Utah.
  • Musadik Malik, Federal Minister of State for Petroleum of Pakistan.
  • 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, Chief Executive IChemE (Institution of Chemical Engineers)
  • Earl P. Stevenson, Arthur D. Little's president and chairman of the Ad Hoc Committee on Chemical and Biological Warfare, which in 1950 expedited the creation of Camp Detrick's Special Operations Division that consolidated chemical and biological warfare projects in one location.
  • Winnett Boyd, engineer
  • Fischer Black, economist who co-developed option pricing, which led to a Nobel Prize for his co-authors (the Nobel prize is not awarded posthumously)
  • Philip Chapman, Australian-born American astronaut
  • Raymond Gilmartin, American businessman, who worked as a consultant for eight years after graduation from Harvard Business School<!-- supporting citation in biography article -->
  • Peter Glaser, inventor of the Solar power satellite
  • David Levy, inventor
  • Pamela Low, developed the flavored coating for Cap'n Crunch cereal
  • Donald Schön, academic
  • Peter Scott-Morgan, Academic & Cyborg
  • Jack Treynor, economist
  • Bernard Vonnegut, atmospheric scientist

References

Further reading

  • James Adams (1992). Bull's eye: the assassination and life of supergun inventor Gerald Bull. (Chapter Seven) Times Books.
  • Eagar, Rick, “Who says it can't be done?” : A brief history of Arthur D. Little, PRISM magazine, 2006 (issue for the 120th anniversary of the company)
  • Peter Herman (2006). Managing other people's business, but not our own. www.adlbook.com
  • E. J. Kahn Jr. (1986). The Problem Solvers. Little Brown.
  • Prism: Bi-Annual Thought Leadership Collection
  • Of Silk Purses and Lead Balloons
  • Alumni Association
  • The Original ADL Alumni Association
  • ADL Chronicles Products and Inventions from the ADL Labs