Friday, December 31, 2010

Inside The Debate Over Outsourcing Information Technology Service Jobs Overseas

U.S. industry is being driven to outsource high-tech service and software jobs to cheap locations overseas, but federal and state governments dare not do so. The issue is a growing political hot potato as more highly educated and well paid IT workers lose their jobs.

Every company providing information technology outsourcing services is being asked by clients how they can substantially reduce costs by shifting work offshore, says William Sweeney, vice president of global government affairs with EDS. "In the commercial sector, if you¹re a major [IT service provider] and you¹re talking to a major customer about a possible client engagement, if you do not have an offshore component, do not even talk to them anymore," he told a recent press gathering in Washington, D.C. "It¹s changed dramatically. They¹ve almost come to expect that to be price competitive -- and with the customer in the driver¹s seat setting prices for their services -- you have to have an offshore component."

Shifting high-tech service jobs offshore is a trend that is accelerating, says Arup Gupta, president of TCS America, an IT services firm based in India. "In a very serious, competitive environment, companies have to concentrate on their core competency and they want to outsource everything and reduce cost and therefore we are seeing the trend toward offshore outsourcing increasing," he says.

Gupta¹s company has 25 years of experience in developing high-tech skill sets among its employees, many of whom it is recruiting from premier technical institutes in India that rival Harvard in terms of the quality of the individuals being trained, he said.

Information Technology Association of America (ITAA) president Harris Miller thinks its less of a problem than people are making it out to be. His association is working hard to derail legislative fixes that require government agencies to award IT contracts only to American companies.

American IT workers should not be paranoid about losing their jobs to cheap offshore rivals, Harris said in response to a question from Manufacturing & Technology News. The high-tech industry is simply in an economic slump and when demand accelerates for products and services, employment will follow thereafter.

"I describe this as a perfect storm," says Miller. The end of the Y2K spending spree, the dot-com collapse and the softening of the global IT market have all conspired against the U.S. information technology workforce. "This is a short-term blip," he says.

Of greater concern is a long-term problem a potential skilled manpower shortage due to the aging workforce and a younger corps of workers not educated in science, technology and engineering. "We have a graying population that is going to retire and the talent pool is going to dry up over night," he said. "It¹s impossible to reach the conclusion that India is going to take all these jobs when the economy is this soft. When the economy starts to pick up again and companies start hiring again, are they going to hire here or are they going to insist that everything be done in India? We don¹t the answer to that yet."

Bruce Mehlman, Assistant Secretary of Technology Policy at the Commerce Department, wasn¹t as sanguine. "Yes, IT workers need to be paranoid," he responded.

The Information Technology Association of America is also lobbying at the state level to defeat legislation that prohibits the "offshore" outsourcing of government IT contracts. "The reason we don¹t want to see legislation prohibiting states from sending work offshore is it hurts our efforts as an association representing American companies to convince countries around the world to open competition to allow EDS, Oracle, Accenture, IBM or Microsoft to win contracts," Harris explained. "We can¹t turn to the rest of the world and say open your markets and then turn around and say if your country wants to send companies here we¹re not going to allow that to happen."

Public-sector contracting officials in federal and state governments are already extremely sensitive to the issue of outsourcing government IT service functions to offshore entities. A politician using the word "offshoring" could not "survive the end of that sentence," said George Newstrom, chief information officer for the Commonwealth of Virginia.

The main issue at the state level is jobs, and one of the problems states confront today is the fact that robust growth in productivity "is gained by a tremendous number of layoffs," said Newstrom. "It¹s a terrible misnomer because it looks like a productivity gain, but we don¹t see it on tax roles or the unemployment rate. It¹s not going anywhere. Productivity is not an indicator that we use in the states. Profit per employee doesn¹t translate to new jobs....I have a grave concern that there is going to be a backlash [against offshoring] very quickly."

Sweeney of EDS agrees, saying there are "some very negative reactions" even to the possibility that any pubic-sector IT work will move offshore. "What we have to do in discussing these complicated issues is to be clear of what specifically we¹re talking about," he said. "What I fear may happen is all of these topics may be merged into some very negative protectionist, prohibitive and uninformed legislation and reaction. That is a real danger to all of us who are in this space in the public and private sector."

Numerous grass-roots political action groups have been created recently to fight for the rights of displaced U.S. IT workers. Many of them are focusing on the H-1B and L-1 immigration laws that allow skilled workers into the country. "Are you unemployed and invisible?" a recently created group in Connecticut called The Organization for the Rights of American Workers asks in its recruitment literature. "If you are currently working but become unemployed in the future, will you become a non-entity? Stand up and be counted!"

This is an interesting debate about outsourcing from www.outsourcing.com

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Trends in Software Outsourcing: Best Practices

Check out this SlideShare Presentation:

Information Technology Outsourcing (from www.outsourcing.com)

In the United States, corporations plan to outsource many thousands of Information Technology (IT) jobs to outside firms. Most of these jobs will belong to so-called offshore organizations in India or Southeast Asia. The media buzz and corporate momentum around IT offshoring and outsourcing continues and shows no signs of abating.

As a current Information Technology professional in the U.S., or a student considering a future career in IT, outsourcing is a business trend you must fully understand. Don't expect the trend to reverse any time in the forseeable future, but don't feel powerless to cope with the changes either.

Changes Coming with Information Technology Outsourcing

Ten years ago, workers were attracted to the Information Technology field given the
  1. challenging and rewarding work
  2. good pay
  3. numerous opportunities, the promise of future growth and long term job stability
Outsourcing will alter and is already altering each of these IT career fundamentals:
  1. The nature of the work will change dramatically with offshoring; the future may be equally rewarding, or it may prove wholly undesirable depending on one's individual interests and goals.

  2. Information Technology salaries will increase in the countries that receive outsourcing contracts and may decrease in the U.S.

  3. Likewise, the total number of IT jobs will increase in some countries and may decrease in the U.S, much future growth will happen outside the U.S, and job stability will remain unclear everywhere until the outsourcing business models mature.

How to Cope with Information Technology Outsourcing

IT workers in the U.S. are already witnessing some impacts of IT outsourcing, but the future impacts will possibly be even greater. What can you do to prepare? Consider the following ideas.
  • Don't Panic - The prospect of job searches or career changes can be quite stressful to Information Technology workers. IT students may understandably begin to question their choice of career. However, the more stress and worry a person takes on, paradoxically the more difficult it becomes to successfully reach their career goals.

  • Don't Wait for The Upturn - So-called experts predicted a sharp upturn in the U.S. economy and increase in IT jobs for several years, that largely did not happen. Expect that IT will operate in the current climate with respect to outsourcing for the foreseeable future.

  • Become a Generalist - Years ago in Information Technology, specialization was king. Those with the heaviest technical backgrounds and loftiest job titles, like Enterprise Architects, commanded the highest salaries. Nowadays, a person is much better positioned if they are skilled in multiple areas of both technology and the business side of IT. Flexibility is king.

  • Look to Smaller Organizations - Fortune 500 companies will primarily pursue offshoring ventures but smaller firms less so. Outsourcing creates a substantial amount of overhead before the gains kick in, and small companies can't afford to pay that price for the foreseeable future.

  • Start Your Own Business - Uncertain economic times, and occasions of industry change, are often the best ones for starting a new business, due to lower prices for capital, less competition, and the natural emergence of big new market opportunities. All it takes is an entrepenurial attitude and a few good ideas.
Above all, whatever your chosen career path, strive to find happiness in your work. Don't fear the ongoing change in Information Technology just because others are afraid. Control your own destiny.

Friday, December 24, 2010

What Is HR Outsourcing?

Learn more about HRO from www.outsourcing.com

Whatever your company's human resources requirements, there's an HR outsourcing firm out there to meet those needs. Some HR outsourcing firms are generalists, offering a wide variety of services, while others are specialists, focusing on specific areas such as payroll or recruiting. Depending on the size of your business and how much control you want to maintain over HR functions, you can either outsource all your HR tasks or contract for services a la carte.

The basic services offered by HR outsourcing firms may include:

  • Overseeing organizational structure and staffing requirements
  • Recruiting, training, and development
  • Tracking department objectives, goals, and strategies
  • Employee and manager training
  • Benefits administration
  • Employee orientation programs

Businesses that outsource HR are typically small-to-midsize firms with between 25 and 1,500 employees. These businesses view HR outsourcing as a strategic tool that relieves them of HR responsibilities and enables them to focus on what they do best. In addition to allowing you to concentrate on your core business activities, outsourcing provides some key benefits, including:

  • Providing you with skilled professionals who are focused specifically on HR
  • Helping you reduce and manage operating costs
  • Improving employee relations

If you need to hand off the entire HR function, consider a professional employer organization (PEO). A PEO becomes the employer of record, handling employee relations, payroll, benefits, workers' compensation, and all the other areas that fall under the HR umbrella, while you manage the employee's everyday business responsibilities. For a step-by-step guide to using and hiring a PEO, check out our Buyer's Guide on Outsource Your HR Using a PEO.

If you don't need the comprehensive services of a PEO, you can contract specific projects through an HR outsourcing firm to help you:

  • Implement a human resource information system (HRIS)
  • Create or update employee handbooks and policy manuals
  • Develop and implement a compensation program
  • Create or review a performance appraisal system
  • Write and update affirmative action plans
  • Provide sexual harassment training

Referrals, the Yellow Pages, and the Web are the best resources for finding an HR outsourcing provider. You have the option of working with an international, national, or regional provider. Any one of those may be able to meet your HR needs.

Whether you're looking to outsource the entire HR function, a portion of it, or a specific project, it's good to know you've got options — lots of them.

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

10 Outsourcing Trends to Watch in 2010 (Part II)

10 outsourcing trends continue from www.outsourcing.com:

7. The Mega-Death of Mega-Deals. Increased near-term cost pressures will drive a continued decline in mega-deals in 2010, Everest predicts. Customers will continue to eschew the billion-plus deals for more flexible approaches to outsourcing, says Lee Ayling, manager of Equaterra's U.K.-based IT advisory.

"In 2010, we will see many contracts focused on core processes with shorter, less expensive transition periods and reduced return on investment timescales," says Brad Everett, executive director of EquaTerra's human resource practice.

8. The Public Interest. All signs point to increased outsourcing in local and state government. "Budgets are tight, but demands for new technologies are strong," explains Glenn Davidson, head of EquaTerra's public sector practice. "The winners in the competition will be offering innovative financing and strong risk insurance."

However, he predicts decreased outsourcing in D.C. "The federal government, with its ability to print money and this administration's push for insourcing, is likely to continue its investment in internal solutions," Davidson says.

9. The (Slow) Return of the Discretionary Spend. Providers of application development, and maintenance and consulting services will develop innovative contract and pricing structures to win customers as the market rebounds next year, according to Everest. Both types of deals took a hit as buyers put discretionary spending on hold.

But such projects will make a gradual recovery in 2010, predicts Everest, noting that "the pace of this change will be dictated entirely by the improvement in the global business environment."

10. Semi-Sourcing. Cloud computing and software-as-a-service—which EquaTerra's Stan Lepeak calls "semi-outsourcing alternatives"—will make waves in the IT services industry in the year ahead.

The IT outsourcing market has reached a major tipping point, according to Forrester Research analysts, and a focus on outcomes means that traditional deals will continue to decrease during the next several years as new utility and cloud service offerings proliferate. "This will be a large focus as companies try to figure out how this will work," agrees Dave Brown, head of EquaTerra's financial architecture practice. "Those that develop a sustainable commercial offering will hit the headlines early and often."

Modularity will be the name of the game. Suppliers are poised to offer buyers more and more plug-and-play services coupled with pay-as-you-go pricing. "We have observed a continuing move toward a more scalable and virtual infrastructure for many services...and more aggressive efforts to take advantage of sourcing's ability to scale up or down with the size of the business," says Melany Williams, partner and managing director of service provider consultancy TPI Momentum.

But it will be small and midsize companies leading the charge in this space in 2010, says Everest, while large enterprises wait for more of the technical and business challenges to be resolved before adopting these new delivery models.

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

10 Outsourcing Trends to Watch in 2010 (Part I)

Great knowledge to learn about outsourcing, from www.outsourcing.com:

It was a long year of intense ups and downs in the IT outsourcing industry. Consolidation among vendors and interest in remote infrastructure management increased, while overall outsourcing demand and IT services pricing decreased.

The market for IT outsourcing is expected to rebound a bit in 2010, say industry watchers. For instance, more than 75 percent of the service providers polled by EquaTerra in the third quarter of this year reported continued growth in their deal pipeline, which was up 10 percent from the previous quarter and 34 percent from the same period last year.

But don't expect too robust a revival. Outsourcing consultancy Everest predicts that although suppliers will see a resurgence in demand for IT and business process outsourcing services in 2009, growth rates are unlikely to return to pre-2008 levels.

Both suppliers and outsourcing customers could be in for a bumpy ride in 2010. Here are 10 trends to look out for as the IT services industry finds its feet in the "new normal" of the post-recession.

1. Transformers 2. Sure, outsourcing customers will still want vendors to transform IT in 2010. But revolutionizing IT service delivery is expensive and difficult.

"Optimization is the new transformation," says Mark Toon, CEO of outsourcing consultancy EquaTerra. "Ultimately, organizations will still want to 'transform' how they deliver back office services, but they typically will want to move in pragmatic, incremental steps and focus on achieving best in class, standardized and optimized delivery models."

2. If at First You Don't Succeed, Renegotiate. There has been an increase in the number of contracts being renegotiated and rebid during the past 12 months, according to outsourcing consultancy Compass America, and that will continue in 2010.

"While many organizations remain keen to avoid the costs of new capital and migrating to new suppliers," says Tom Schramm, EquaTerra's managing director of finance and accounting, "investment is being made in ensuring existing suppliers and internal processes are delivering optimum value."

3. Multi-Sourcing Malaise. Multi-sourcing seems ideal in theory—work with best-in-class IT service providers and keep costs in check, thanks to the competition. In reality, it's been difficult at best and disastrous at worst for many customers.

"Organizations are reassessing their approach to selective sourcing and multi-sourcing, and realizing that they need to have a certain level of maturity in terms of processes, governance and vendor management in order to make the multi-vendor model work," says Bob Mathers, senior consultant with Compass America. "Organizations that have pursued multi-sourcing without investing in management capabilities are finding themselves longing for the problems they used to have with their one and only vendor." Watch for reevaluation and restructuring of these relationships next year.

4. Captive No More? While certain companies will continue to set up fully-owned IT delivery centers abroad, look for more captive center divestitures in the new year and a "marginally lower" number of new captives being set up, predicts Everest.

5. The Urge to Merge. The number of top-tier service providers shrunk this year, creating both challenges and opportunities for other vendors in 2010.

"Consolidation at firms, including HP, EDS, Dell, Perot, ACS and Xerox, may represent an opportunity for their competitors," says Charles Arnold, managing director of EquaTerra's IT advisory for the Americas. "From acquiring former staff of top-tier providers to snapping up now empty chairs at the bidding table, competitive providers may be able to leverage this chance to grow capability and market share in 2010."

The M&A party is likely to continue after we've rung in the new year. "This consolidation will most likely involve tier two and tier three providers, as they struggle to compete with the breadth and depth that their tier one competitors can offer," says David Rutchik, partner with outsourcing consultancy Pace Harmon. "We would not be surprised to see a non-offshore provider acquiring an offshore-based provider."

Everest predicts that most consolidation in 2010 will focus on acquisitions of "adjacent and complementary capabilities across functions, verticals and geographies," as opposed to mergers solely to increase scale.

6. Offshoring to...America? The greenback has had a grueling year. That could play out in some interesting ways. "With the continued decline in value of the dollar and sluggish employment, I would expect to see more U.S.-based sourcing solutions evaluated by private and public sector clients across the globe," says Peter Iannone, EquaTerra's executive director for the Americas.

Friday, December 17, 2010

Looking Beyond Business Process Outsourcing

Telegenisys Inc. is one of the leading providers of Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) services, offering a wide range of back office, customer care & support and telemarketing outsourcing solutions to clients worldwide. Aided by world-class infrastructure, business competencies, domain knowledge & expertise and a dedicated group of highly skilled and trained professionals, we are able to provide the best quality outsourcing services to clients. Our core competencies include services such as customer care & support, B2C & B2B telemarketing, data entry & data conversion, web promotion, content development, accounting and financial services, tax consultancy, medical records retrieval, market research, database creations, document scanning
& sorting, infomercial sales services, and insurance claims.

You can always expect the best from us: Using established Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) methodologies in combination with customized offshore outsourcing solutions, we are able to provide improved process integration and optimal performance to our clients.

With our outsourcing services, you can easily create and sustain a better brand image for your products and services. Customer satisfaction is the key to the successful creation and sustenance of a popular brand name and we understand that very well. Committing to long-term business relations will not be a problem since we have designed our delivery systems to be scalable and highly flexible. We never let our eyes off the targeted goals and objectives, something that allows us to achieve and deliver the desired results through our business process outsourcing (BPO) services.

Business Process Outsourcing Benefits

Boosts efficiency: The need for outsourcing is felt because in every business organization, big and small, there are certain processes that are both necessary and yet contribute little to the actual productivity. Most of these processes are highly time-consuming and since they often require special skills and expertise, businesses find it difficult to manage those processes without losing their concentration on the core processes. Business process outsourcing helps because it's like getting it done by the experts. It not only boosts efficiency, but also enables significant time savings.

Reduces Costs: Business process outsourcing automatically results in significant cost savings. Business that choose outsourcing do not have to spend top dollars in recruiting and managing human resources, something that enables instant cost savings.

Skilled BPO Professionals are the key: The success of outsourcing may depend on varied factors, but eventually it's the skills and experience of BPO professionals that makes all the difference. When you choose a business process outsourcing service provider, it will become easier for you to ensure that the processes are carried out in the most professional manner, saving you both time and money. So, if you want to promote your business interests, contact a business process outsourcing service provider right away.

Offshore Outsourcing

Developing countries are currently the world leaders in IT and BPO offshore outsourcing space. The outsourcing industry is growing at a healthy rate of around 30%.

Why choose offshore outsourcing?

Ever since the concept of offshore outsourcing was first devised, it has witnessed continuous growth, both in terms of volumes and value. Certain countries have managed to achieve leadership status amongst offshore outsourcing locations because they have some natural advantages that allow them to provide both quality and cost-effectiveness to clients. Reliable reports indicate that on average, offshore outsourcing to these countries results in savings of around 45%.
Due to their colonial history, some developing countries have natural advantages such as a vast talent pool of qualified professionals, proficient in both written and spoken English. What is even better is that hiring the required talents and skill sets is a lot more affordable in these countries. With basic salaries starting at around $5000, they hold great potential as cost-effective outsourcing destinations.

Get the Offshoring Advantage

With easily available professional skills and talents and that too at the most competitive rates, developing countries have emerged as the top offshore outsourcing destinations. Some popular destinations have a wide network of colleges, universities and private institutes that churn out industry-ready professionals by the thousands every year, thereby ensuring a regular supply of essential resources. By choosing the best available outsourcing destination, any business, large or small, can easily realize the full potential of business process outsourcing.

(I found this article from www.outsourcing.com)

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

The Future of Outsourcing


Globalization has been brutal to midwestern manufacturers like the Paper Converting Machine Co. For decades, PCMC's Green Bay (Wis.) factory, its oiled wooden factory floors worn smooth by work boots, thrived by making ever-more-complex equipment to weave, fold, and print packaging for everything from potato chips to baby wipes.

But PCMC has fallen on hard times. First came the 2001 recession. Then, two years ago, one of the company's biggest customers told it to slash its machinery prices by 40% and urged it to move production to China. Last year, a St. Louis holding company, Barry-Wehmiller Cos., acquired the manufacturer and promptly cut workers and nonunion pay. In five years sales have plunged by 40%, to $170 million, and the workforce has shrunk from 2,000 to 1,100. Employees have been traumatized, says operations manager Craig Compton, a muscular former hockey player. "All you hear about is China and all these companies closing or taking their operations overseas."

But now, Compton says, he is "probably the most optimistic I've been in five years." Hope is coming from an unusual source. As part of its turnaround strategy, Barry-Wehmiller plans to shift some design work to its 160-engineer center in Chennai, India. By having U.S. and Indian designers collaborate 24/7, explains Vasant Bennett, president of Barry-Wehmiller's engineering services unit, PCMC hopes to slash development costs and time, win orders it often missed due to engineering constraints -- and keep production in Green Bay. Barry-Wehmiller says the strategy already has boosted profits at some of the 32 other midsize U.S. machinery makers it has bought. "We can compete and create great American jobs," vows CEO Robert Chapman. "But not without offshoring."

Come again? Ever since the offshore shift of skilled work sparked widespread debate and a political firestorm three years ago, it has been portrayed as the killer of good-paying American jobs. "Benedict Arnold CEOs" hire software engineers, computer help staff, and credit-card bill collectors to exploit the low wages of poor nations. U.S. workers suddenly face a grave new threat, with even highly educated tech and service professionals having to compete against legions of hungry college grads in India, China, and the Philippines willing to work twice as hard for one-fifth the pay.

Workers' fears have some grounding in fact. The prime motive of most corporate bean counters jumping on the offshoring bandwagon has been to take advantage of such "labor arbitrage" -- the huge wage gap between industrialized and developing nations. And without doubt, big layoffs often accompany big outsourcing deals.

The changes can be harsh and deep. But a more enlightened, strategic view of global sourcing is starting to emerge as managers get a better fix on its potential. The new buzzword is "transformational outsourcing." Many executives are discovering offshoring is really about corporate growth, making better use of skilled U.S. staff, and even job creation in the U.S., not just cheap wages abroad. True, the labor savings from global sourcing can still be substantial. But it's peanuts compared to the enormous gains in efficiency, productivity, quality, and revenues that can be achieved by fully leveraging offshore talent.

Thus entrepreneurs such as Chapman see a chance to turn around dying businesses, speed up their pace of innovation, or fund development projects that otherwise would have been unaffordable. More aggressive outsourcers are aiming to create radical business models that can give them an edge and change the game in their industries. Old-line multinationals see offshoring as a catalyst for a broader plan to overhaul outdated office operations and prepare for new competitive battles. And while some want to downsize, others are keen to liberate expensive analysts, engineers, and salesmen from routine tasks so they can spend more time innovating and dealing with customers. "This isn't about labor cost," says Daniel Marovitz, technology managing director for Deutsche Bank's global businesses (DB ). "The issue is that if you don't do it, you won't survive."

The new attitude is emerging in corporations across the U.S. and Europe in virtually every industry. Ask executives at Penske Truck Leasing why the company outsources dozens of business processes to Mexico and India, and they cite greater efficiency and customer service. Ask managers at U.S.-Dutch professional publishing giant Wolters Kluwer (WTKWY ) why they're racing to shift software development and editorial work to India and the Philippines, and they will say it's about being able to pump out a greater variety of books, journals, and Web-based content more rapidly. Ask Wachovia Corp. (WB ), the Charlotte (N.C.)-based bank, why it just inked a $1.1 billion deal with India's Genpact to outsource finance and accounting jobs and why it handed over administration of its human-resources programs to Lincolnshire (Ill.)-based Hewitt Associates (HEW ). It's "what we need to do to become a great customer-relationship company," says Director of Corporate Development Peter J. Sidebottom. Wachovia aims to reinvest up to 40% of the $600 million to $1 billion it hopes to take out in costs over three years into branches, ATMs, and personnel to boost its core business.

Here's what such transformations typically entail: Genpact, Accenture (ACN ), IBM Services, or another big outsourcing specialist dispatches teams to meticulously dissect the workflow of an entire human resources, finance, or info tech department. The team then helps build a new IT platform, redesigns all processes, and administers programs, acting as a virtual subsidiary. The contractor then disperses work among global networks of staff ranging from the U.S. to Asia to Eastern Europe.

In recent years, Procter & Gamble (PG ), DuPont (DD ), Cisco Systems (CSCO ), ABN Amro (ABN ), Unilever, Rockwell Collins (COL ), and Marriott (MAR ) were among those that signed such megadeals, worth billions.

In 2004, for example, drugmaker Wyeth Pharmaceuticals transferred its entire clinical-testing operation to Accenture Ltd. "Boards of directors of virtually every big company now are insisting on very articulated outsourcing strategies," says Peter Allen, global services managing director of TPI, a consulting firm that advised on 15 major outsourcing contracts last year worth $14 billion. "Many CEOs are saying, 'Don't tell me how much I can save. Show me how we can grow by 40% without increasing our capacity in the U.S.,"' says Atul Vashistha, CEO of outsourcing consultant neoIT and co-author of the book The Offshore Nation.

Some observers even believe Big Business is on the cusp of a new burst of productivity growth, ignited in part by offshore outsourcing as a catalyst. "Once this transformation is done," predicts Arthur H. Harper, former CEO of General Electric Co.'s equipment management businesses, "I think we will end up with companies that deliver products faster at lower costs, and are better able to compete against anyone in the world." As executives shed more operations, they also are spurring new debate about how the future corporation will look. Some management pundits theorize about the "totally disaggregated corporation," wherein every function not regarded as crucial is stripped away.

PROCESSES, NOW ON SALE
In theory, it is becoming possible to buy, off the shelf, practically any function you need to run a company. Want to start a budget airline but don't want to invest in a huge back office? Accenture's Navitaire unit can manage reservations, plan routes, assign crew, and calculate optimal prices for each seat.

Have a cool new telecom or medical device but lack market researchers? For about $5,000, analytics outfits such as New Delhi-based Evalueserve Inc. will, within a day, assemble a team of Indian patent attorneys, engineers, and business analysts, start mining global databases, and call dozens of U.S. experts and wholesalers to provide an independent appraisal.

Want to market quickly a new mutual fund or insurance policy? IT services providers such as India's Tata Consultancy Services Ltd. are building software platforms that furnish every business process needed and secure all regulatory approvals. A sister company, Tata Technologies, boasts 2,000 Indian engineers and recently bought 700-employee Novi (Mich.) auto- and aerospace-engineering firm Incat International PLC. Tata Technologies can now handle everything from turning a conceptual design into detailed specs for interiors, chassis, and electrical systems to designing the tooling and factory-floor layout. "If you map out the entire vehicle-development process, we have the capability to supply every piece of it," says Chief Operating Officer Jeffrey D. Sage, an IBM and General Motors Corp. (GM ) veteran. Tata is designing all doors for a future truck, for example, and the power train for a U.S. sedan. The company is hiring 100 experienced U.S. engineers at salaries of $100,000 and up.

Few big companies have tried all these options yet. But some, like Procter & Gamble, are showing that the ideas are not far-fetched. Over the past three years the $57 billion consumer-products company has outsourced everything from IT infrastructure and human resources to management of its offices from Cincinnati to Moscow. CEO Alan G. Lafley also has announced he wants half of all new P&G products to come from outside by 2010, vs. 20% now. In the near future, some analysts predict, Detroit and European carmakers will go the way of the PC industry, relying on outsiders to develop new models bearing their brand names. BMW has done just that with a sport-utility vehicle. And Big Pharma will bring blockbuster drugs to market at a fraction of the current $1 billion average cost by allying with partners in India, China, and Russia in molecular research and clinical testing.

Of course, corporations have been outsourcing management of IT systems to the likes of Electronic Data Systems (EDS ), IBM (IBM ), and Accenture for more than a decade, while Detroit has long given engineering jobs to outside design firms. Futurists have envisioned "hollow" and "virtual" corporations since the 1980s.

It hasn't happened yet. Reengineering a company may make sense on paper, but it's extremely expensive and entails big risks if executed poorly. Corporations can't simply be snapped apart and reconfigured like LEGO sets, after all. They are complex, living organisms that can be thrown into convulsions if a transplant operation is botched. Valued employees send out their résumés, customers are outraged at deteriorating service, a brand name can be damaged. In consultant surveys, what's more, many U.S. managers complain about the quality of offshored work and unexpected costs.

But as companies work out such kinks, the rise of the offshore option is dramatically changing the economics of reengineering. With millions of low-cost engineers, financial analysts, consumer marketers, and architects now readily available via the Web, CEOs can see a quicker payoff. "It used to be that companies struggled for a few years to show a 5% or 10% increase in productivity from outsourcing," says Pramod Bhasin, CEO of Genpact, the 19,000-employee back-office-processing unit spun off by GE last year. "But by offshoring work, they can see savings of 30% to 40% in the first year" in labor costs. Then the efficiency gains kick in. A $10 billion company might initially only shave a few million dollars in wages after transferring back-office procurement or bill collection overseas. But better management of these processes could free up hundreds of millions in cash flow annually.

Those savings, in turn, help underwrite far broader corporate restructuring that can be truly transformational. DuPont has long wanted to fix its unwieldy system for administering records, payroll, and benefits for its 60,000 employees in 70 nations, with data scattered among different software platforms and global business units. By awarding a long-term contract to Cincinnati-based Convergys Corp., the world's biggest call-center operator, to redesign and administer its human resources programs, it expects to cut costs 20% in the first year and 30% a year afterward. To get corporate backing for the move, "it certainly helps a lot to have savings from the outset," says DuPont Senior Human Resources Vice-President James C. Borel.

Creative new companies can exploit the possibilities of offshoring even faster than established players. Crimson Consulting Group is a good example. The Los Altos (Calif.) firm, which performs global market research on everything from routers to software for clients including Cisco, HP, and Microsoft (MSFT ), has only 14 full-time employees. But it farms out research to India's Evalueserve and some 5,000 other independent experts from Silicon Valley to China, the Czech Republic, and South Africa. "This allows a small firm like us to compete with McKinsey and Bain on a very global basis with very low costs," says CEO Glenn Gow. Former GE exec Harper is on the same wavelength. Like Barry-Wehmiller, his new five-partner private-equity firm plans to buy struggling midsize manufacturers and use offshore outsourcing to help revitalize them. Harper's NexGen Capital Partners also plans to farm out most of its own office work. "The people who understand this will start from Day One and never build a back room," Harper says. "They will outsource everything they can."

Some aggressive outsourcers are using their low-cost, superefficient business models to challenge incumbents. Pasadena, (Calif.)-based IndyMac Bancorp Inc. (NDE ), founded in 1985, illustrates the new breed of financial services company. In three years, IndyMac has risen from 22nd-largest U.S. mortgage issuer to No. 9, while its 18% return on equity in 2004 outpaced most rivals. The thrift's initial edge was its technology to process, price, and approve loan applications in less than a minute.

But IndyMac also credits its aggressive offshore outsourcing strategy, which Consumer Banking CEO Ashwin Adarkar says has helped make it "more productive, cost-efficient, and flexible than our competitors, with better customer service." IndyMac is using 250 mostly Indian staff from New York-based Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp. (CTSH ) to help build a next-generation software platform and applications that, it expects, will boost efficiency at least 20% by 2008. IndyMac has also begun shifting tasks, ranging from bill collection to "welcome calls" that help U.S. borrowers make their first mortgage payments on time, to India's Exlservice Holdings Inc. and its 5,000-strong staff. In all, Exlservice and other Indian providers handle 33 back-office processes offshore. Yet rather than losing any American jobs, IndyMac has doubled its U.S. workforce to nearly 6,000 in four years -- and is still hiring.

SUPERIOR SERVICE
Smart use of offshoring can juice the performance of established players, too. Five years ago, Penske Truck Leasing, a joint venture between GE and Penske Corp., paid $768 million for trucker Rollins Truck Leasing Corp. -- just in time for the recession. Customer service, spread among four U.S. call centers, was inconsistent. "I realized our business needed a transformation," says CFO Frank Cocuzza. He began by shifting a few dozen data-processing jobs to GE's huge Mexican and Indian call centers, now called Genpact. He then hired Genpact to help restructure most of his back office. That relationship now spans 30 processes involved in leasing 216,000 trucks and providing logistical services for customers.

Now, if a Penske truck is held up at a weigh station because it lacks a certain permit, for example, the driver calls an 800 number. Genpact staff in India obtains the document over the Web. The weigh station is notified electronically, and the truck is back on the road within 30 minutes. Before, Penske thought it did well if it accomplished that in two hours. And when a driver finishes his job, his entire log, including records of mileage, tolls, and fuel purchases, is shipped to Mexico, punched into computers, and processed in Hyderabad. In all, 60% of the 1,000 workers handling Penske back-office process are in India or Mexico, and Penske is still ramping up. Under a new program, when a manufacturer asks Penske to arrange for a delivery to a buyer, Indian staff helps with the scheduling, billing, and invoices. The $15 million in direct labor-cost savings are small compared with the gains in efficiency and customer service, Cocuzza says.

Big Pharma is pursuing huge boosts in efficiency as well. Eli Lilly & Co.'s (LLY ) labs are more productive than most, having released eight major drugs in the past five years. But for each new drug, Lilly estimates it invests a hefty $1.1 billion. That could reach $1.5 billion in four years. "Those kinds of costs are fundamentally unsustainable," says Steven M. Paul, Lilly's science and tech executive vice-president. Outsourcing figures heavily in Lilly's strategy to lower that cost to $800 million. The drugmaker now does 20% of its chemistry work in China for one-quarter the U.S. cost and helped fund a startup lab, Shanghai's Chem-Explorer Co., with 230 chemists. Lilly now is trying to slash the costs of clinical trials on human patients, which range from $50 million to $300 million per drug, and is expanding such efforts in Brazil, Russia, China, and India.

Other manufacturers and tech companies are learning to capitalize on global talent pools to rush products to market sooner at lower costs. OnStor Inc., a Los Gatos (Calif.) developer of storage systems, says its tie-up with Bangalore engineering-services outfit HCL Technologies Ltd. enables it to get customized products to clients twice as fast as its major rivals. "If we want to recruit a great engineer in Silicon Valley, our lead time is three months," says CEO Bob Miller. "With HCL, we can pick up the phone and get somebody in two or three days."

Such strategies offer a glimpse into the productive uses of global outsourcing. But most experts remain cautious. The McKinsey Global Institute estimates $18.4 billion in global IT work and $11.4 billion in business-process services have been shifted abroad so far -- just one-tenth of the potential offshore market. One reason is that executives still have a lot to learn about using offshore talent to boost productivity. Professor Mohanbir Sawhney of Northwestern University's Kellogg School of Management, a self-proclaimed "big believer in total disaggregation," says: "One of our tasks in business schools is to train people to manage the virtual, globally distributed corporation. How do you manage employees you can't even see?"

The management challenges will grow more urgent as rising global salaries dissipate the easy cost gains from offshore outsourcing. The winning companies of the future will be those most adept at leveraging global talent to transform themselves and their industries, creating better jobs for everyone.

(I found this interesting article from www.outsourcing.com)

Friday, December 10, 2010

Test

Outsourcing -- What is Outsourcing

This great article from www.outsourcing.com perfectly explain the definition of outsourcing.

So, what is outsourcing? Outsourcing is contracting with another company or person to do a particular function. Almost every organization outsources in some way. Typically, the function being outsourced is considered non-core to the business. An insurance company, for example, might outsource its janitorial and landscaping operations to firms that specialize in those types of work since they are not related to insurance or strategic to the business. The outside firms that are providing the outsourcing services are third-party providers, or as they are more commonly called, service providers.

Although outsourcing has been around as long as work specialization has existed, in recent history, companies began employing the outsourcing model to carry out narrow functions, such as payroll, billing and data entry. Those processes could be done more efficiently, and therefore more cost-effectively, by other companies with specialized tools and facilities and specially trained personnel.

Currently, outsourcing takes many forms. Organizations still hire service providers to handle distinct business processes, such as benefits management. But some organizations outsource whole operations. The most common forms are information technology outsourcing (ITO) and business process outsourcing (BPO).

Business process outsourcing encompasses call center outsourcing, human resources outsourcing (HRO), finance and accounting outsourcing, and claims processing outsourcing. These outsourcing deals involve multi-year contracts that can run into hundreds of millions of dollars. Frequently, the people performing the work internally for the client firm are transferred and become employees for the service provider. Dominant outsourcing service providers in the information technology outsourcing and business process outsourcing fields include IBM, EDS, CSC, HP, ACS, Accenture and Capgemini.

Some nimble companies that are short on time and money, such as start-up software publishers, apply multisourcing -- using both internal and service provider staff -- in order to speed up the time to launch. They hire a multitude of outsourcing service providers to handle almost all aspects of a new project, from product design, to software coding, to testing, to localization, and even to marketing and sales.

The process of outsourcing generally encompasses four stages: 1) strategic thinking, to develop the organization's philosophy about the role of outsourcing in its activities; 2) evaluation and selection, to decide on the appropriate outsourcing projects and potential locations for the work to be done and service providers to do it; 3) contract development, to work out the legal, pricing and service level agreement (SLA) terms; and 4) outsourcing management or governance, to refine the ongoing working relationship between the client and outsourcing service providers.

In all cases, outsourcing success depends on three factors: executive-level support in the client organization for the outsourcing mission; ample communication to affected employees; and the client's ability to manage its service providers. The outsourcing professionals in charge of the work on both the client and provider sides need a combination of skills in such areas as negotiation, communication, project management, the ability to understand the terms and conditions of the contracts and service level agreements (SLAs), and, above all, the willingness to be flexible as business needs change.

The challenges of outsourcing become especially acute when the work is being done in a different country (offshored), since that involves language, cultural and time zone differences