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Troublesome Findings from Outsourcing Center's Study on Decision-Making Processes By Kathleen Goolsby, Senior Writer
Outsourcing Center conducted executive interviews of 68 leading organizations (within 11 industries and the public sector) throughout the U.S. and Europe between December 2002 and May 2003 regarding their most recent outsourcing decision-making processes. The Center determined the trend has three primary drivers:
Until recently, most outsourcing relationships with successful outcomes originated in a variety of consultant- and analyst-aided decision processes. Until the late 1990's, there was no other pool from which to draw the insights necessary to craft a highly successful outsourcing arrangement. But now, the growing pool of veterans has facilitated the growth of this new trend in outsourcing decision-making. Study Findings
Analysis of the Veterans TrendA key finding of the study reveals that buyers perceive in-house veteran experience to be not only a cost-effective replacement of advisory firms but, also, of similar value in achieving successful outcomes. The study, however, finds the opposite to be reality, as illustrated in Figure 2.
The leap in numbers for outcomes that do not meet expectations and where the decision-making approach did not rely on advisory firms points to a danger zone for buyer organizations using this approach. The veterans approach is not unlike a nation's commander-in-chief making a decision as to whether or not to go to war (and how), based simply on the knowledge of a military veteran. Although there is much that is common to the hands-on experience of in-house outsourcing "veterans" and advisory firms' consultants, a veteran's knowledge is similar to the portion of an iceberg that is visible above the water's surface (with potential dangers lurking because of the not-visible portion beneath the surface). Consider the following in assessing a veteran's role in a prior outsourcing initiative. At what level was the veteran involved in crucial aspects that would impact the success of a relationship? Consider how these parameters will impact knowledge for a current decision. Was the veteran a strategic planner or just following orders; a decision-maker or an apprentice? What was the veteran's role in assessing risks of the "battle plan?" Since an army can converge from different directions (and an outsourcing transition and implementation must be flexible for changes coming from many directions), how effective were the veteran's judgments as to what was significant in developing the best plan? Was the veteran a key resource in achieving success as the troops' stamina dwindled or communications were lacking and they became demoralized? What was the veteran's role when the going got tough as circumstances changed; how did the veteran help to ensure the outsourcing plan would flourish? Just as a commander would not put an entire nation and economy at risk on the advice of a veteran's experience in one, or even several, conflicts, a buyer organization's executives must consider whether an in-house outsourcing veteran's experience and knowledge is relevant and comprehensive for the outsourcing decision at hand. Is veteran IT experience, for example, applicable to a robust BPO initiative? Is the veteran's experience relevant to offshoring? Each outsourcing initiative is a business case on its own. While there are some commonalities, each requires a different set of knowledge. How have the marketplace, technology, and outsourcing best practices changed since the veteran's experience? In-house veterans are not exposed to the market on a daily basis, but advisory firms are. Recommendations for Outsourcing AdviceIn-the-trenches veteran experience is highly valued; indeed, some advisory firms blend veterans and consulting expertise into their advisory solutions so the buyer gets the best of both worlds. Nevertheless, using solely an in-house veteran approach can result in costly mistakes. Areas of problems encountered by participants in this study are illustrated in Figure 3.
The decision to use an in-house veteran or an advisory firm should be based on whether the veteran is able to structure an outsourcing arrangement that produces the desired objectives and also mitigates the high incidence of mistakes illustrated in Figure 3. Outsourcing Center recommends buyers consider the following criteria when determining an approach to advice for outsourcing:
Lessons from the Outsourcing Journal:
Publish Date: October 2003
Copyright © 2003 - Everest Partners, L.P.
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