I selected the ones which as less than 10 years old have more than 15 pages. Have more to say at the bottom of the post, but take a look at a few:
Challenges in Mining: Scarcity or Opportunity? (2015, 2.9Mb, 41pg)
The Five Frames – A Guide to Transformational Change (2011, 4.5Mb, 33pg)
Commercial Payments in Asia-Pacific: Is this the New Opportunity? (2015, 1.1Mb, 40pg)
Addressing the global affordable housing challenge (2016, 3.9Mb, 29pg)
Restoring Economic Health to the North Sea (2015, 1.1Mb, 28pg)
Manufacturing the Future: The Next Era of Global Growth and Innovation (2013, 1.6Mb, 38pg)
How Unconventionals are Changing the Oil and Gas Market (2013, 2Mb, 36pg)
How can companies capture veteran opportunities (2012, 2.4Mb, 46pg)
The Internet of Things and Big Data: Opportunities for Value Creation (2013, 600K, 17 pages)
Context for Global Growth and Development (2014, 900K, 11pg)
How will Internet of Things, mobile internet, data analytics and cloud transform public services by 2030? (2015, 1.5Mb, 15pg)
Care.data: Turning data into insights (2014, 1.1Mb, 11pg)
Assessing the Impact of the Financial and Economic Crisis and Ideas to Enhance Americans’ Retirement Security (2009, 1.2Mb, 22pg)
Perspectives on manufacturing, disruptive technologies, and Industry 4.0 (2014, 1.7Mb, 17pg)
Provision of Business Analysis Services for Qatar Railways Company (2012. 700K 34pg)
From poverty to empowerment MGI INDIA (2014, 900K, 21pg)
The Archipelago Economy: 2015 Outlook and Beyond (2015, 1Mb, 14pg)
Lessons learned from 2014 Open Enrollment Period (2014, 300K,11pg)
Big Data and Advanced Analytics (BDAA) for the Finance function (2014, 1.3Mb, 18pg)
China Energy Demand Perspective (2014, 2.3Mb, 18pg)
Successful Integrated Care Systems (2015, 600K, 15pg)
US Productivity Growth: The Company and Sector Story (2015, 770K, 17pg)
Insurance trends and growth opportunities for Poland (2015, 1.8Mb, 25pg)
What makes private public partnerships work (2011, 1.1Mb, 12pg)
Thinking small to grow big in China (2012, 900K, 20pg)
Boundaryless Hospital – Rethink and Redefine Health Care Management (2014, 2.8Mb, 22pg)
Digital Darwinism (2017, 1.4Mb, 20pg)
Impact of Research & Innovation on Profitable Growth in Chemicals (2014, 1M, 15pg)
USPS Future Business Model (2010, 300K, 39pg)
Healthcare.gov Red Team (3.8Mb, 15 pg)
Digital Health intelligence (2014, 600K, 26pg)
TB Diagnostics in India (2011, 700K, 20pg)
Laying the foundation for a sound industry – OECD (2013, 400K, 17pg)
Can the Financial Sector Promote Growth and Stability? (2015, 300K, 17pg)
Enhancing the contribution of MSMEs to economic development: main barriers and possible interventions (2011, 800K, 50pg)
A couple of thoughts:
- In true McKinsey style, there is a lot of analysis and data
- Titles are written in sentence-form with a “takeaway”
- Standardized color, font, layout, and kicker-boxes
- Frameworks to simplify the complex: timelines, value chain, bubble charts, histograms, maturity models, waterfall charts, and ROE analysis
- Diverse topics ranging from Big data in Mining to Polish insurance
- Use of experts, quotations, and inferences for more qualitative data
- Use of large surveys (n=20K+) to create voice of customer data
What is your major takeaway from viewing these presentations?
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You have provided a tremendous service here. Thank you! Looking at these decks made me wonder what the delivery of these presentations was like. The slides seem designed to stand alone and survive delivery by an unskilled speaker. This is the opposite of the Guy Kawasaki approach (https://guykawasaki.com/the_102030_rule/), where it might be difficult to reconstruct the presentation from the slides alone.
My preference is to do the heavy intellectual lifting in a narrative report and then put together a presentation that serves as a verbal executive summary. When preparing the presentation, the logic comes first, and then the slides serve the logic.
Thanks for comment. I have done both – but prefer slides that stand alone. Slides always get passed around.
Great work. Thanks for putting this invaluable piece together.
Surely – thanks for reading and sharing.
These slides look really, really ugly. Honestly, I’d expect better from an MBB consultant in 2017.
For many of them, I would agree. Many of these are for conferences and the like – but yes, not very “put together”.
Nice share, I found this piece much informative and of value. Thank you for sharing