Consulting firms will shrink, no doubt. Question is rather by what degree and that would depend on how much of their project inflow can actually be automated away. Perhaps strategic consulting is well positioned. They shine in situations that weren't anticipated like the chip shortage during covid. Automotive companies were scrambling to secure capacity allocations and they needed someone with relationships on the ground. Essentially lots of emotional work at the end. When stakes are high and trust is essential, human-to-human is still what counts.
Yeah, it seems strange to me that otherwise smart people here started in engaging in short-sighted takes about starting a dev shop with a friend to get ahead of the AI curve.
No one really seems to want to answer the simple question: "Why would anyone be willing to buy your AI slop when there is no barrier for a company to generate their own with the same or lower cost?"
> as soon as AI companies aren't able to subsidize anymore, we will see a renaissance of IT consulting
I think the price that LLMs have to get to for companies to return to paying consulting rates is much higher than you think. Claude Code at $2000/month is roughly one day of a top consultant's rate. (And this omits the possibility of companies make it a capex by hosting open source models)
It's not "appearances".
I know all the guys I meant since university.
All of them were top notch PhDs. Physics. CS. Some were excellent teachers even before graduation. Others were at the leading edge of ML even two decades ago.
In short: it's not a superficial impression as a customer. I know their pros and cons from studying to social life during and after graduation, early career, ...
So, my POV is personal experience. Your POV is gossip?
That was in the past. Now they would just prompt LLMs on your behalf for a fat fee. You might as well do it yourself and spend that fee on extra tokens.