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Monday, February 19, 2018

Professional Services Market to Grow at a CAGR of 33% by 2020 ...
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Professional services are occupations in the tertiary sector of the economy requiring special training in the arts or sciences. Some professional services require holding professional licenses such as architects, auditors, engineers, doctors and lawyers. Other professional services involve providing specialist business support to businesses of all sizes and in all sectors; this can include tax advice, supporting a company with accounting, IT services or providing management advice.


Video Professional services



Definition

Many industry groupings have been used for academic research when looking at professional services firms, making a clear definition hard to attain. Some work has been directed at better defining professional service firms (PSF). In particular, Von Nordenflycht generated a taxonomy of professional service firms, defining four types:

  1. Classic PSFs (e.g. law and accounting firms): characterised by a high knowledge intensity, a professionalised workforce, and low capital intensity
  2. Professional campuses (e.g. hospitals): characterised by a high knowledge intensity, a professionalised workforce, and high capital intensity
  3. Neo-PSFs (e.g. management consultants): characterised by a high knowledge intensity and a low capital intensity
  4. Technology developers (e.g. R&D firms, biotechs): characterised by a high knowledge intensity and a high capital intensity

Frameworks such as this aid the ability of managers and academics to better understand how such firms manage themselves and how to judge benchmark practices.


Maps Professional services



Example occupations

There is no definitive list of occupations in professional services, but commonly held examples include the following:


Professional Services for GDPR Compliance â€
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Provision

Professional services can be provided by sole proprietors, partnerships or corporations. A person providing the service can often be described as a consultant. In law, barristers normally organise themselves into chambers. Businesses in other industries, such as banks and retailers, can employ individuals or teams to offer professional services for their customers. Major cities such as London and New York are leading global centres for professional services firms.


Facilitize - Feature - Professional Services
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Marketing

The marketing and selection of professional-service providers may depend on factors such as skill, knowledge, experience, reputation, capacity, ethics, and creativity. Large corporations may have a formal procurement process for engaging professional services. Prices for services, even within the same field, may vary greatly. Professional-service providers may offer fixed rates for specific work, charge in relation to the number or seniority of people engaged, or charge in relation to the success or profit generated by the project.


Content Marketing for Professional Services: Does It Cannibalize ...
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See also

  • Big Four auditors
  • Financial services

Agencies now have 31 new ways to buy professional services
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References


Business: Associations
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External links

  • Indicators of regulatory conditions in the professional services--Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
  • Better Regulation of Professional Services--European Union
  • Key Facts about UK Financial and Related Professional Services--TheCityUK
  • Professional Service Firms--University of Cambridge

Source of article : Wikipedia