Where They Are Now: Gail Steinel
Consultants face two hurdles in retirement: All of the necessary components—the desire, the means and the conditions—were in place for former Arthur Andersen and BearingPoint executive vice president Gail Steinel to leave the profession at the tender age of 50. But none of those early retirement enablers were nearly as valuable as the consulting profession itself.
Joe Kornik | March 19, 2009
An Early Retirement… Consulting Style
by Eric Krell
Consultants face two hurdles in retirement: All of the necessary components—the desire, the means and the conditions—were in place for former Arthur Andersen and BearingPoint executive vice president Gail Steinel to leave the profession at the tender age of 50. But none of those early retirement enablers were nearly as valuable as the consulting profession itself.