Yep, it's called Logica now. I don't know about anywhere else, but in Holland the name CMG was ruined in 2002-2003 recession when they got their lawyers to declare all their permies to be temps, somehow got that through a Dutch employment court, then sacked anybody who wasn't on a client project, with very little severance compensation. Basically, after that nobody with experience wanted to work for them. So, one name change later, they started hiring lots of naive new graduates, and are now continuing with the same old practises of charging clients an arm and a leg, paying people a pittance, paying the directors huge bonusses and treating people like disposable nappies; tulip on them and then chuck them out.
To answer Paddy's point; I think companies still use them because they're very good at the golf course sales pitch technique.
Bunch of tossers; they don't deserve to eat the dangleberries from a camel's arse.
To answer Paddy's point; I think companies still use them because they're very good at the golf course sales pitch technique.
Bunch of tossers; they don't deserve to eat the dangleberries from a camel's arse.


I also pulled in a lot of added benefit by growing accounts and helping my customer by delivering projects early. It all went tits up after logica's much cheapness model came in the door. The new business model was go in cheap then screw the customer on change control and move on. At the time I was trying to explain why I was trying to set up a sales pitch for an existing customer the logibod involved couldn't grasp that a customer might actually want us back... There was a wake for the company when logica finally wound up CMG over 500 people turned up
Comment