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The current economic conditions have compelled the majority of CEO’s to cut costs. Declining revenues, reduced
liquidity and debt reduction, all loom large in the corporate environment today. The big question has become ‘how
to make fewer dollars go further?’ This is as much a strategic as it is an operational question. Business leaders are sharpening their skills, one of the most important skills to develop is an understanding of what to undertake inhouse and what to outsource.It is the simple question of leverage. If you can get non-core functions converted into
a business process with KPI’s then it can be potentially outsourced.
What Outsourcing Delivers
Outsourcing can deliver a number of key benefits to any business:
- It allows you as a CEO or senior manager to concentrate on where you can add value to your business and
strategic management. This is critical to ensure that you review your business model to take advantage of the
opportunities and mitigate the threats.
- If you can’t realise savings in the order of 50% of the direct cost of performing the same function internally, then
you should go back to your service provider and get them to review their proposal. Despite all the benefits of
strategic focus cost reduction is real, necessary and an essential component of any successful outsourcing
strategy. Virgin Money saved 55% of the cost of payroll management by outsourcing.
- Accessing the best technology in a field can be a major benefit of outsourcing. It’s not that a lot of technology is
expensive it’s just that selecting the right solution, implementing it effectively and ensuring training and redundancy
takes time. An outsourcing service provider has been through the process many times and generally can provide better
technology in a shorter time frame. All this translates into lower risk and lower cost. For instance, in network
administration where access to good diagnostic tools can determine the difference between quick resolution and
prolonged downtime.
- Outsourcing also allows you to eliminate single point dependency in your business. In the non-enterprise sphere
this often means that you liberate your business from being held hostage to an individual with considerable
internal expertise. In the payroll area there are many organisations where major risks are experienced every time
the payroll manager is on annual leave or sick during a payday.
- Knowledge management can be an essential benefit. There is nothing impossible or insurmountable about all the
occupational health and safety obligations throughout Australia. It’s simply a huge impost on any business to try
and keep up with all the aspects of the legislation regulations in every state. Accessing specific knowledge is a far
more effective option, being more compliant, cheaper and lower risk.
Despite the advantages there is no benefit in outsourcing without considering the implications to your business to
ensure that it turns into a boom and not a bang. Outsourcing will change your business. Done well it will improve your
agility and flexibility. Done poorly someone will end up with egg on their face, and it may be you.
Activities you can Outsource
Any function or process is a potential candidate for outsourcing. Among the typical examples include:
- IT Functions - you can outsource most IT functions, from network management to project work, software
development, website development, search engine optimisation and data warehousing. You may benefit from the
latest technology, superior knowledge and software upgrades without having to invest in expensive systems or
keep up with industry trends.
- Payroll Processes and HR - outsourcing activities such as payroll management, human resource consultancy,
superannuation administration and recruitment that provides access to specialist skills, workflow technology and
eliminate single point dependency.
- Finance - you already outsource auditing so why not do the same with your entire accounting function, including
bookkeeping, tax management and invoicing? The critical issue is to ensure that you are in control of the process
and that there is a separation between the auditing and processing functions.
- Sales and Marketing - many organisations use a consultant or an agency to handle marketing communications -
smaller businesses, or those in specialised markets, can also outsource sales to specialist agencies.
- Health and Safety - there are consultants who specialise in health and safety compliance tasks. They may be
able to ensure you meet all the requirements, including complex risks, more cost-effectively than you can manage
in-house.
Consider conducting a telesales campaign, the marketing objective may be to drive traffic to the website and deliver
qualified leads to the sales team. The qualified leads could be passed to an in-house sales force or an outsourced
telesales organisation. Decisions to outsource in this scenario may be clear-cut. Telemarketing by its very nature,
offers very specific and measurable KPI’s and, a firm specialising in delivering a program as outlined above, gives
the business owner or manager a clear pathway for going to an outsourced solution. There are few limiting factors to
proceed, as there is no asset or resource base to shut down as part of the decision-making. Moreover, a contractual
arrangement would be results-based. For any organisation however, a framework should be in place to enable the
decision-making.
Decision-Making Framework
- Work out what is a core competency of your business. What gives you a competitive edge and makes you
better than the competition? Whatever that is, focus on that competency, outsource it and you do not succeed.
Everything else you do is a potential candidate for outsourcing. Dell, for example, considers its core competency
understanding its customers. This has lead to outsourcing assembly, product innovation, application software,
HRM and payroll.
- Having worked out what you can outsource look at the systems currently in place. Make sure that they are
logical, have good controls and integrity. Even if you don’t have the best and latest technology, make sure that you
optimised your company’s current logical systems before considering outsourcing. If you currently have a mess
and you outsource it you will only get an outsourced mess.
- Work out what your objective is – is it to save money, access technology, eliminate single point dependency or is it
to free resources in order to focus on core strategic competency? Whatever the single or multiple objectives, if you
don’t know what you are trying to achieve then you can’t achieve it. What will the payoff be: increased efficiency,
improved customer service, decreased expenses, and improved profits? Make sure that you develop some KPI’s so you can evaluate the extent to which you are realising your objectives.
- Have a look around in the market and investigate what service providers are able to provide. Get a feel for the
range of services available and use information to develop a specification of your requirements. Unless you
are a large corporate don’t conduct a formal tendering process. Service providers can interpret you as rigid
and inflexible and you will pay more and probably end up with a sub optimal outcome. Rather invite the service
provider to respond to the specification you have put together.
- Forward your specifications to a select number of service providers and measure the time it takes them to provide
a proposal to you. An unresponsive sales team is probably a reflection of a service provider who is not client
centred or has poor management controls. Either way you do not want to do business with them. Don’t be afraid
to talk to service providers, as the time you invest up front will ensure that you get someone who understands your
objectives and the context.
- Evaluate the proposals submitted and check whether:
- The proposals provided actually address issues raised in specifications. There’s no point outsourcing it if it
doesn’t solve your problem.
- The service provider has experience in your industry dealing with issues you want to solve.
- The consultants are willing to understand your needs and propose an effective solution rather than just selling
their service.
- There is a cost saving – essential to get full value out of the exercise should be realisation in the order of
50% cost savings. However don’t let price be the determining factor select a service that isn’t too cheap or
overpriced.
- The solution proposed is innovative and scalable using an appropriate level of technology.
- The risks are with the service provider and not with you as the client.
- The implementation plan is credible and has the appropriate controls in place. If a service provider can’t get
implementation right then there is little chance they can get the service delivery right. You could end up with
scrambled egg on more than just your breakfast plate.
- Make sure that you research your service provider. Rigorously check with referees on how the service provider
manages things when they go wrong. It’s easy to manage during the good times. It’s when things go wrong that
the service provider shows its true worth.
- Once you have selected a service provider and embarked upon implementation, treat them as a partner rather
than a supplier. Tell them where you can or can’t realise objectives. Get their input on how to optimise the results.
- Monitor performance through KPI’s while you may have outsourced the process you continue to have full
responsibility for the outcomes and must take ownership and control.
Successful outsourcing is about getting the process right at each stage, and the formation of sustainable partnerships.
Every business has limited resources, and managers have limited time and attention. Outsourcing non-core functions
enables management to focus on strategic growth in your business. Outsourcing providers can be beneficial in that
they manage risk for you with their expertise, provide access to technology and ensure savings to your business.
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