Meet the leaders of MBB, the consulting giants advising the world's most powerful CEOs
MBB firms advise companies and governments in areas like strategy, mergers, and AI adoption.
The firms' leaders focus on a global roster of clients and oversee tens of thousands of employees.
You might not know their names, but they likely have the ear of many powerful CEOs.
They're the leaders of what are widely considered the most prestigious strategy consulting firms: McKinsey & Company, Bain & Company, and Boston Consulting Group, which are collectively referred to as the Big 3, or MBB.
MBB firms are often tough places to land a job, and their consultants are some of the most sought-after in the industry.
They're the people tech giants like Microsoft, Amazon, and Apple — as well as government agencies — turn to for advice on things like mergers and acquisitions, business strategy, and AI adoption. MBB consultants have also gone on to lead some of the world's biggest companies.
So, who's leading the nearly hundred thousand employees across these influential firms?
Here's a look at the leaders at McKinsey, Bain, and BCG.
Bob Sternfels is the global managing partner and chair of the board of directors at McKinsey, which is headquartered in New York City and has offices around the world. The firm employs about 40,000 people.
Senior partners first elected Sternfels in 2021 and re-elected him to a second three-year term in 2024.
Sternfels grew up in California's Central Valley and has worked at McKinsey since 1994, when he joined the San Francisco office. Prior to becoming global managing partner, he led McKinsey's client capabilities around the world. Before that, he ran the operations practice for the Americas and the private equity and principal investors practice globally.
He studied economics and history at Stanford University, where he also played Division I varsity water polo. Sternfels has said on several occasions that his sports background has influenced his leadership style. He got his master's in politics, philosophy, and economics at the University of Oxford, where he was a Rhodes Scholar.
Sternfels recently told Business Insider that humor and vulnerability are some of his key leadership tools. He also said he likes to take small groups on walks when visiting McKinsey offices because it can help folks open up.
"A little levity — a joke at your own expense, a lighthearted moment — can go a long way toward building trust, breaking down barriers, and democratizing the team room," he said.
When he was elected global managing partner, the firm said Sternfels was often described as organized, proactive, and a systems thinker.
Under his leadership, McKinsey has navigated the AI revolution, launching QuantumBlack, the firm's AI consulting arm.
During his tenure, McKinsey has also faced scrutiny for earlier advising Purdue Pharma on how to boost sales of OxyContin. Sternfels testified before Congress in 2022, and the firm has paid about $1.6 billion in recent years to settle legal claims.
McKinsey has also recently reduced its staff by 10%, BI reported in May. The firm said at the time that the reorganization was in part due to AI driving new levels of efficiency and that it planned to hire thousands of new consultants in 2025.
Christophe De Vusser is the worldwide managing partner, CEO, and chairman of Bain & Company, which is based in Boston and has about 19,000 employees globally. The company was founded in 1973.
Before taking on the role in July 2024 and moving to New York, De Vusser was a partner based in Brussels, where he led Bain's private equity practice for Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. De Vusser is the first European to hold the role of worldwide managing partner and CEO, the company said in a 2024 press release.
De Vusser, who first joined Bain in 2000, began his career at the consumer products giant Procter & Gamble, maker of Tide detergent and Crest toothpaste. De Vusser has master's degrees in civil engineering and multilingual business communication from the University of Ghent, according to Bain.
De Vusser's rise to the top role comes as the firm's business is evolving because of tech advances. In December, Bain said tech and "AI-enabled revenue" accounted for 30% of the company's business in 2024. Bain expects that revenue to climb to 50% in the coming years.
In a Bain podcast, De Vusser said the firm's clients are grappling with massive amounts of change, including around artificial intelligence. It's a technology, he said, that's still in its early days.
"It will continue to mature at immense speeds, we believe, in the coming decades," he said on the podcast.
De Vusser has also written about AI. In a recent LinkedIn post, he pointed to Bain research that found fewer than 20% of companies had "meaningfully scaled" generative AI. The reason, he said, is that many organizations tend to view AI "primarily as a technology initiative rather than using it as a catalyst to fundamentally reimagine their business."
For organizations to get it right, De Vusser wrote, they need to simplify key processes, use technology so that it fits with strategic goals, and enable workers to use AI.
BCG CEO Christoph Schweizer described his leadership style in a video produced by the company: "Values-led, empathetic, transparent, curious," he says.
The firm elected Schweizer for a second term this year. BCG says its reelection process is "unique." All 1,500 managing directors and partners have an equal vote when choosing a CEO.
Schweizer, who first became CEO in 2021, joined BCG in 1997, according to his biography on the firm's website. He holds an MBA from the University of Texas at Austin's McCombs School of Business and a Bachelor's degree from the WHU Otto Beisheim School of Management in Germany.
During his tenure, BCG has grown in several areas, including the firm's investments in AI — which accounted for bout 20% of the firm's total revenue in 2024 and are expected to grow this year, according to a press release from BCG.
Schweizer has also navigated some controversies during his tenure, including two recent projects related to the Gaza conflict. BCG backed out of a multimillion-dollar American-Israeli project to deliver aid in Gaza that was marked by violence. And two senior BCG leaders were demoted for their role in another project that modeled the potential cost of relocating Palestinians from the territory.
One of the firm's biggest challenges moving forward, Schweizer says in the company interview, will be helping clients embed AI.
"To seize the opportunity, our clients need to fundamentally redefine operating models, value chains, decision-making, and end-to-end processes, while protecting themselves from associated risks, such as info security," he said.
Another major focus for BCG is sustainability, he said.
"Companies and governments will have to get serious about decarbonization extremely fast: setting the right targets, reduction mechanisms, metrics, and enforcement," Schweizer said.
Read the original article on Business Insider
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
12 minutes ago
- Yahoo
HSBC Reiterates Buy on Amazon (AMZN), $256 PT
Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) is one of the . On August 4, HSBC analyst Paul Rossington reiterated a Buy rating on the stock with a $256.00 price target. Amazon has had a strong second quarter due to its growth in North America and International divisions. AWS growth was not as hoped, highlighting the need to spend more money to allow AI and cloud growth which are currently at early stages. 'While AWS growth disappointed vs Microsoft's 4QFY25 result, both updates outline the increased investment required to support growth at what remains the early stages of cloud and AI cycles, for which AMZN, with a leading share of the cloud market, looks well placed." christian-wiediger-rymh7EZPqRs-unsplash "As a result, 2Q25 capex of USD32.2bn was 25% higher than consensus of USD25.6bn. We believe this should now be considered the quarterly run-rate going forward. Cash & cash equivalents of USD61.5bn were broadly in line after taking higher capex into account.' Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) is an American technology company offering e-commerce, cloud computing, and other services, including digital streaming and artificial intelligence solutions. While we acknowledge the potential of AMZN as an investment, we believe certain AI stocks offer greater upside potential and carry less downside risk. If you're looking for an extremely undervalued AI stock that also stands to benefit significantly from Trump-era tariffs and the onshoring trend, see our free report on the best short-term AI stock. READ NEXT: 10 Must-Watch AI Stocks on Wall Street and Disclosure: None.
Yahoo
12 minutes ago
- Yahoo
What to Watch Ahead of Disney Q3 Earnings
Disney (NYSE:DIS) reports third-quarter results for fiscal 2025 before the market opens on August 6. Consensus estimates call for adjusted EPS of approximately $1.45 on revenue of $23.7 billion, implying modest 2% top-line growth YoY. The stock is up 4% year-to-date and trades roughly 7% below its 52-week high of $124.70. Investor attention will focus on direct-to-consumer (DTC) margins and subscriber momentum. In Q2, Disney's DTC segment generated $336 million in operating income, up from $47 million a year earlier and added 1.4 million Disney+ subscribers. Subscriber stability and continued margin expansion will be key focus areas, as investors assess whether Disney's cost discipline is translating into lasting DTC profitability. The Experiences segment (theme parks and cruises) continues to perform well. Q2 experiences operating income rose 8% YoY to $2.5 billion, with investors assessing whether gating capacity or rising costs could pressure margins in Q3. Investors may also listen for commentary on recent releases such as Snow White and Fantastic Four, as sentiment around Disney's film strategy has been mixed and studio margins remain under pressure. With forward guidance unchanged ($5.75 adjusted EPS full year) and streaming margins expected to contribute more in H2, Disney's Q3 commentary will be critical. Management will need to demonstrate both streaming discipline and theme park profitability to support the current valuation. This article first appeared on GuruFocus. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
12 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Triumph Financial, Inc. (TFIN): A Bull Case Theory
We came across a bullish thesis on Triumph Financial, Inc. on by HighLine09. In this article, we will summarize the bulls' thesis on TFIN. Triumph Financial, Inc.'s share was trading at $55.96 as of August 4th. TFIN's trailing P/E was 124.66 according to Yahoo Finance. A close-up of a cash register, with passengers lined up at the window, illustrating the company's payments and holdings. Triumph Financial (TFIN), a Dallas-based financial holding company, has evolved from a traditional community bank into a fintech platform focused on modernizing the trucking industry's financial infrastructure. Positioned as a non-traditional community bank, Triumph operates through four segments—Banking, Factoring, Payments, and Intelligence—creating an integrated ecosystem to streamline freight transactions. The company's freight factoring arm provides immediate liquidity to trucking firms, leveraging its banking subsidiary for low-cost funding, and has achieved high returns through invoice purchases. By introducing Factoring-as-a-Service (FaaS) and AI-driven instant decision models, Triumph has extended its technology to large brokers, reinforcing its market presence and monetizing its platform. The Payments division, anchored by TriumphPay, addresses the inefficiencies and fraud risks inherent in analog payment systems. With its acquisition of HubTran, Triumph enhanced auditing capabilities and now processes over 50% of U.S. brokered freight transactions, touching $30.5 billion in annualized volume. Complementing this is LoadPay, a digital wallet offering 24/7 access to funds for small carriers, bypassing traditional ACH systems while building loyalty through integrated financial solutions. The Intelligence segment, launched in late 2024, leverages Triumph's vast, neutral dataset to deliver actionable insights and dynamic pricing through recent acquisitions like and ISO, boasting gross margins above 90%. Despite a challenging freight recession and declining EPS since 2021, Triumph continues to invest heavily in technology, prioritizing scale and network density before monetization. Management expects its fee-based revenues from Payments, LoadPay, FaaS, and Intelligence to surpass historical factoring income by late 2025, offering higher-margin, resilient earnings. With catalysts including freight market normalization and product adoption, Triumph is positioned to become the dominant digital payments and intelligence network in trucking, unlocking significant long-term value. Previously, we covered a bullish thesis on Northeast Bank (NBN) by Rock & Turner in May 2025, which highlighted its disciplined loan acquisition strategy and strong credit quality. The stock has appreciated about 9.7% since our coverage, as the thesis played out with sustained growth. The thesis still stands, given its hybrid model. HighLine09 shares a similar view on Triumph Financial but focuses on its fintech-driven trucking ecosystem. Triumph Financial, Inc. is not on our list of the 30 Most Popular Stocks Among Hedge Funds. As per our database, 13 hedge fund portfolios held TFIN at the end of the first quarter which was 14 in the previous quarter. While we acknowledge the potential of TFIN as an investment, we believe certain AI stocks offer greater upside potential and carry less downside risk. If you're looking for an extremely undervalued AI stock that also stands to benefit significantly from Trump-era tariffs and the onshoring trend, see our free report on the best short-term AI stock. READ NEXT: 8 Best Wide Moat Stocks to Buy Now and 30 Most Important AI Stocks According to BlackRock. Disclosure: None. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data