Now the real hard work begins, PwC

The merger of Price Waterhouse and Coopers & Lybrand created the blueprint for the Big Four: global assurance and advisory businesses built on solid audit foundations with plenty to offer the world’s biggest and most ambitious companies

Written by AccountancyAge

This week marks PricewaterhouseCoopers’ tenth birthday, and while it is - and should be - a time for celebration, it also begs the question: Is PwC equipped to cope with the challenges of the next decade?

In its short life the firm has already been through as many as three distinct cycles. The first required the bashing together of two disparate cultures. The second saw it achieve its ambition of being seen as the world’s number one professional services firm. The third, and most recent, has seen the firm realise that once you reach the top, the only way is down.

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Ian Powell, who this week became only the third senior partner in the UK firm’s history, acknowledges as much. ‘If you’re number one and you’re not agile, you’re a target,’ he told Monday’s Financial Times. ‘Now it’s time for us to really start to use our position as market leader.’

It was a frank but necessary assessment. PwC’s current growth rate is 6% a year. Deloitte’s is thought to be twice that and could overtake the firm in the UK as early as next year.

And, as a partner from the advisory side of the business, Powell will know better than most that PwC faces a mountain to climb in a market where Deloitte is the only Big Four firm to be taken seriously. And worse: all this in a business climate that is as unfriendly as PwC has ever seen.

The next ten years will be a lot harder than the first.

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