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Title: Blogs, Wikis, Twitter and Dopplr. The Buyoyo Stor


1
IS6600 4
  • Global IT BP Outsourcing and Offshoring

There are no IT projects there are just
business improvement projects in which IT is a
critical enabler CEO British Airways
2
Learning Objectives
  • Familiarisation with offshoring and outsourcing
  • Focus on IT services and system development
  • Plans for the Offshore process
  • Cases and trends in organisations, globally

3
Outsourcing
  • This is an increasingly common practice
  • It means that (usually) non-core-competence
    activities are undertaken by a third party
  • Typical examples include
  • ITrelated services ITO
  • New software development
  • Business process services BPO
  • E.g. data entry, customer call centre

4
Outsourcing
  • The work may be undertaken in a variety of
    locations
  • Inshore within the same country
  • Offshore at a more distant location
  • Nearshore at a nearby country or time zone
  • Backshore return the work to the home country
  • Multisourcing and Microsourcing
  • Split your project into many (small) parts and
    assign each one to a different provider
  • Mobile or Nomadic software providers can be
    located anywhere, yet still provide services

5
Insourcing
  • Insourcing implies that the work is done by an
    affiliate of the organisation, but not done
    centrally.
  • Insourced work can be inshore (same country) or
    offshore (overseas), or nearshore (a nearby
    country)
  • E.g. HSBC gets BPO work done by a subsidiary in
    China (Nearshore insourcing)

6
Offshoring
  • Offshoring often implies the involvement of a
    cheaper and less developed country
  • E.g. a US firm outsources software development to
    India
  • E.g. an Indian firm outsources software
    development to Vietnam
  • But there are many hazards as well
  • Managerial, HR, Work Style, Political, currency
    and wage fluctuations, competition for employees,
    regulatory issues
  • Offshoring should be a strategic choice, not an
    accidental mistake
  • Failing to plan for it is planning to fail at
    it!

7
Offshoring is a Huge Activity
  • Global total US80 Billion annually
  • India had 58 Billion
  • Growing at 15-20 annually
  • By 2020, look for 0.5 trillion
  • Though the potential total market would be approx
    1.75 trillion
  • So, it is no wonder that offshoring is seen as a
    great opportunity.
  • In 2008, India had 65 of the ITO and 43 of the
    BPO markets.

8
The Provider Perspective
  • Providing IT services is big business
  • The BRIC countries 120 more
  • Industry Technology parks
  • China graduates 4 times as many engineers as the
    US
  • Globally, communication costs have fallen
    dramatically
  • Internet bandwidth and costs have increased
    dramatically

9
Diversification or Centralisation?
  • Diversification has long been a good practice in
    the financial investment industry but in
    outsourcing, the same is not true.
  • Most providers are located in a single country,
    and even a single location, concentrating the
    risks.
  • Diversification can help to reduce the impact of
    risks.

10
Diversification - Example
  • A French company offshored 2,000 high-end IT jobs
  • Initially it planned to locate them all in
    Bangalore, India.
  • Later decided to adopt a more diversified
    approach
  • 65 in India _at_ 20k/year/head,
  • 15 in Romania _at_ 25k/year/head,
  • 15 in Egypt _at_ 20k/year/head
  • 5 in France _at_ 40k/year/head.
  • Why these countries?
  • Romania - closer proximity to European markets.
  • Egypt - new talent availability.
  • Total cost slightly higher than an all-India
    approach, but diversification reduced risks.

11
Diversification Issues
  • In the more popular offshore locations, the
    providers compete with each other for the best
    talent this produces a lot of turnover, as well
    as higher wage costs.
  • Few locations are better than all others on all
    counts diversification brings in new skills,
    new languages, new values.
  • India is obviously highly penetrated by offshore
    work, yet there are many other providers in South
    America, the Middle East and SE Asia.
  • Time zone issues, suitability of the local skill
    base, proximity to key customers, government
    initiatives can all play an influencing role.

12
Strategic Issues 1
  • Cost
  • In India, we can get three security engineers
    for the cost of one in the U.S.
  • But, is cheaper really strategic?
  • Total Cost of Engagement?
  • China is cheaper than India for programmers, more
    expensive for Supervisory Mgt staff.
  • There can be many hidden costs
  • If you always worry about cost, you will get poor
    quality solutions. Quality costs!

13
Strategic Issues 2
  • Talent
  • Access resources unavailable at home
  • But employee churn and provider reliability is a
    major problem
  • Resource quality (esp at smaller providers)
  • Knowledge transfer and the risk of IP loss/theft
  • Do you share values with the provider?
  • Good governance? Ethics? Efficiency? Flexibility?

14
Strategic Issues 3
  • Agility
  • Respond to opportunities and get products to
    market faster
  • If you can overcome the differences of language,
    communication style, culture
  • Anything strategic requires a corresponding
    investment of resources and a long term vision.

15
Strategic Issues 4
  • Take advantage of time zone differences
  • Send work from time zone to time zone
  • US to S or SE Asia to Europe
  • Non-stop work
  • But coordination must be perfect
  • Few success stories
  • Small and simple tasks are more suitable

16
Captive Centres 1
  • Captive centres wholly owned subsidiaries that
    work for the parent company.
  • For the Fortune Global 250 companies, 153 had
    Captive Centres in 2008.
  • A 60 failure rate for CCs
  • Created for the wrong reason
  • Need investment cannot save money immediately

17
Captive Centres 2
  • Three Captive Centre Development strategies
    Hybrid, Shared and Divested.
  • Hybrid The Captive Centre outsources (inshore)
    work to a local service provider, so that some
    work for the parent is done internally, some
    externally.
  • Shared The Captive Centre also takes on work
    from other clients, making it a profit centre
    and rendering it liable for acquisition by an
    investor.
  • The Captive Centre may be sold (divested) if the
    parent is assured that it will not lose quality
    of service under new management.

18
Captive Centres 3
  • The management of a captive centre should depend
    on a strategic position
  • Why was the Captive Centre set up?
  • What is its longer term objective?
  • A poorly managed captive centre can be a drain on
    finances, as they have large fixed costs
  • There are many examples of failed CCs
  • Citigroup, Deutsche Bank, Unilever, Dell
  • And successes
  • ANZ, WNS, Genpact

19
For Example ANZ Bank 1
  • Developed an integrated Captive Centre offshore
    in Bangalore for ITO and BPO operations.
  • The bank set out to create ANZ in Bangalore with
    fully integrated ANZ culture.
  • Work includes back-office processing for
  • credit cards,
  • mortgages,
  • wealth management products,
  • a/c payable
  • HR.

20
ANZ Bank 2
  • IT graduates in Bangalore are paid at A8k/annum,
    compared with A45-50k/annum in Australia.
  • Although India is getting more expensive, labour
    costs are still sufficiently low to mean that
    India is an attractive destination for offshored
    work.
  • By focusing on culture, ANZ Bangalore is also
    producing individuals who can move out into other
    parts of India and further instill the culture
    there.

21
The Big Three India, China and Russia
  • Large number of engineering graduates and
    well-qualified employees
  • Thousands of software exporting firms
  • But around 120 countries provide some offshoring
    services (RO, BR, PH, VN, PL, HU, MY, AR, FJ,)
  • The Indian firms in particular are now global
    firms in their own right with offshore
    operations to service clients locally.
  • Offshore sites in AU, CN, HU, JP, UK, US, UY
  • A significant threat to US- and Europe- based
    firms

22
Indian Structuring Restructuring
  • A decade ago, Indian firms like TCS set up
    offshore operations around the world
  • Around 50 countries to date (www.tcs.com)
  • In China, around 90 of employees are local a
    very high level.
  • However, there are some concerns, notably with IP

23
Offshoring IT Services
  • If you want the loan application processed
    today, click 1 and it will be done in Fiji
    today. Otherwise press 2, it will be done in
    this country by next month.
  • What clicked 1?
  • There is increasing offshoring of IT services
  • Application processing, telemarketing,
    help-desking, airline reservations, data entry,
    etc.

24
Offshoring IT Services
  • All these services are highly dependent on both
    IT and language
  • The relevant data is mobile it can be sent
    through the Internet easily
  • HSBC employs thousands of staff in China, India
    and Malaysia.
  • English speaking countries (populations) have a
    distinct advantage
  • But can you understand Indian English?

25
Languages, Skills and Govt Support
  • Dubai and Singapore IT security skills
  • PH, LK, IN, English language call centres
  • Morocco French language call centres
  • Central/South American countries Spanish call
    centres for Spain and Hispanic USA, e.g.
    help-desking, patient scheduling, data entry,
    helped by synchronous time zones.
  • Active govt support in UY and CL.
  • In sub-Saharan Africa, where English is spoken,
    e.g. KE BW, there are similar trends.

26
Relative Costs of IT Professionals
  • US, Canada
  • Singapore, Japan
  • Eastern Europe
  • Brazil
  • Russia
  • India
  • China
  • SE Asia (VN, TH, PR, MY)
  • Mexico, Fiji
  • Higher
  • Mid
  • Lower

27
Its not just Salaries
  • Salaries are a major component, but also consider
  • Housing
  • Medical insurance
  • Local transportation
  • 13th/14th/15th month bonus, etc.
  • And lots of hidden costs, such as

28
Hidden Costs?
  • Transaction costs
  • Infrastructure costs
  • Knowledge transfer costs
  • Currency movements and fluctuations
  • Dispute resolution
  • Travel costs in the early stages
  • Unpredictable risks wars, financial collapse,
    terrorism, regulatory changes (e.g.
    nationalisation, tax breaks), IP theft,
    corruption, proprietary knowledge, etc.

29
The IT Offshoring Journey
  • SunnySystems (SS) is a small sized HK software
    house. It needs to reduce costs, so it decided
    that the next version of its software would be
    developed in India. The project manager met a
    rep. of a large India provider at a US IT fair
    and decided to sign a contract. Problems started
    almost immediately SS used a development
    platform called Progress, but this is little used
    in India. SS overlooked the fact that the Indian
    programmers had no experience with the latest
    version of Progress. Knowledge transfer from SS
    to India was fraught with problems. One year
    later, the project was written off as a failure
    and abandoned. Clients now started to lose
    confidence in a company that could not deliver.
    The project manager had already lost his job.

30
Is It Too Dangerous?
  • Offshoring can be exciting or scary
  • Depends on your appetite for adventure, for the
    exotic, for risks
  • Many lessons have already been learned, and can
    be read, so companies considering offshoring have
    no excuse not to know in advance what they are
    getting into.
  • But are the risks over stated? Is it really that
    dangerous?
  • What should be done?

31
Three steps (Common Sense?)
  • Laying the foundations
  • Do we have a plan, a strategy? Who is involved?
    Are we ready? a year? 18 months?
  • Identifying the providers
  • Which country? Which providers? Selection
    criteria? RFI and RFP. 6 months
  • Assessing Selecting the Provider
  • Visit the offshore location. Meet the people.
    Observe their work. Sign the contract. at least
    a month

32
Laying the Foundations 1
  • Assessing if we are ready
  • How good is our project management?
  • Can we manage an offshore project?
  • Can our people work with them?
  • Are changes in work norms acceptable?
  • What is our appetite for risk?
  • The hardest step is re-engineering internal
    processes so as to ensure that they are ready.

33
Laying the Foundations 2
  • The launch team
  • Offshoring is complex it needs a powerful team
  • Build a strategic vision, commitment and push for
    implementation
  • Agile and able to make quick decisions
  • Expertise in offshoring
  • Learn from others experiences (including
    consultants)

34
Laying the Foundations 3
  • Strategy Plan
  • Precisely why are we doing this?
  • How are we going to achieve this goal?
  • What are the risks?
  • Operational issues
  • HR costs, skill sets, current future
    operations, exactly what are we offshoring,
  • Develop a business case for offshoring
  • With performance indicators to measure later
    success
  • Costs, satisfaction rates, productivity rates,
    delivery times, benchmarking against competitors,
  • Planning for resistance to change
  • How to keep key people, retrain some, let others
    go

35
Identifying the Providers
  • In India, there are thousands of providers!
  • Many have offshore agents
  • Globally, there are tens of countries that do
    offshore work
  • Which one do you want?
  • General skills or specific? Language?
  • Risks? IP protection? Security? Culture? Time?
  • What is your strategic concern? Cost, quality,
    efficiency?

36
Selecting a Country
  • While selection of the provider is often done
    carefully, selection of the country is the
    subject of much less care.
  • It may relate to personal factors or connections.
  • Who is going to have to go and work there, to
    supervise and control? Can they cope?
  • So many expats dont like their assignment
  • Spousal/family issues.
  • Is makes no sense to select a country that no one
    wants to visit or live in.

37
Provider Selection Criteria
  • General Criteria
  • Company size stability
  • HR policies
  • Quality management
  • Technical expertise
  • Business domain knowledge
  • Track record
  • Methodologies used
  • Costs
  • Quality initiatives ISO, CMM, 6 Sigma, etc.
  • Extra care criteria
  • Infrastructure
  • SW production environment
  • Interntional experience
  • Language skills
  • Employee turnover
  • Org culture flexibility, responsiveness, soft
    skills
  • Global presence
  • Disaster recovery backup
  • 24-hour support

Weight the criteria matrix the providers
38
Send an RFI, using the criteria
  • Who we are
  • What we are looking for
  • Questions about the provider
  • History, customers, management, geo-locations,
    turnover, infrastructure, security
  • Questions on services offered
  • Domain expertise, platforms, skills,
    subcontractors
  • Questions on strategy
  • Vision, market share, alliances

39
Send an RFP to the most promising firms
  • What we expect in the proposal
  • How are you going to undertake a specific project
  • Need to provide sufficient project details
  • Need to do a good requirements analysis
  • Try to stimulate the providers creativity by
    asking more specific/difficult questions
  • Ask for references of work they have done.

40
Assessing Selecting the Provider
  • Evaluate the RFPs
  • Identify false promises, too good to be true
    offers
  • Learn that yes means yes, no and maybe.
  • Often all simultaneously
  • Check the references
  • Ask what worked, and what didnt.
  • Technology always has problems.
  • Soft issues culture, values, trust, wavelength.
  • Dont only look at cost.

41
The Offshore Visit
  • Important for large/complex projects, long-term
    cooperation and situations where there is a high
    degree of dependence on the provider (i.e. it is
    hard to switch)
  • Launch team members should be involved, but also
    other members of senior management and those who
    are not yet convinced about offshoring.

42
Offshore Things to Do
  • Dont just visit the HQ, but also the work site,
    national software association,
  • Talk to other foreigners who are there
  • Plan the site visit carefully not on the plane
  • Dont visit too many and dont only listen to
    sales pitches they are all the same.
  • Do speak to project managers and programmers
    how good are their soft skills?
  • Walk around literally

43
Recommendations Contract Negotiations
  • To offshore or not.
  • Project objective, functionality scope,
  • Comparison of providers
  • Financial justifications to top mgt.
  • Legal/contract issues price, IP
    confidentiality, penalties incentives

44
Contract Specificity
  • It would seem sensible to have specific contracts
  • More quality and satisfaction??
  • Consultants report that a less than complete
    contract means more room for creativity and
    flexibility
  • The vendor can then work within a framework and
    be creative which is more satisfying for vendor
    staff
  • They are not just being told what to do
  • An onsite supervisor can help
  • It requires the client and vendor to have similar
    cultural values tolerance for uncertainty
  • A client-vendor matching process is needed

45
Insourcing and Outsourcing
  • You need to do the requirements analysis
  • Dont trust others to know your business better
    than you do
  • Outsource the software development
  • Software testing must be done by the users, not
    the developers
  • Developers tend not to do such a good job here
  • And if the software is not carefully tested, the
    chance of rejection is higher.

46
Summary
  • Dont underestimate the importance of careful
    planning, or of allowing enough time to lay the
    foundations carefully.
  • The project launch team should be small, agile,
    open-minded and pro-offshoring
  • A low-risk pilot project will help a company find
    out if it is ready for offshoring
  • Contracts are important, but developing a
    relationship with the provider is probably more
    critical.
  • The two parties need to align their business
    interests for the duration of the project.

47
Chinas Progress
  • Currently only 10 of Chinese software is
    exported, compared to 78 of Indias, though the
    dollar value of the Chinese software market is
    double Indias.
  • China has 18,000 software companies, strongly
    supported by govt policy and economic growth.
  • China plans to have
  • 1000 new software firms with global sourcing
    expertise,
  • 100 global software firms to set up business in
    China
  • 10 cities within China identified as locations
    for world class software development

48
Chinas Progress
  • The top ten Chinese software firms engaged in
    offshore work have, together, about the same
    revenue and headcount as the 5th largest Indian
    firm.
  • Together, these top ten firms account for less
    than 30 of the total Chinese market.
  • This indicates a considerable degree of
    fragmentation in the market (too many micro
    providers).
  • Market consolidation is now likely to result.

49
Key Chinese Providers
  • CVIC SE (1991)
  • iSoftStone (2001)
  • Neusoft (1991)
  • Beyond Soft (1995)

50
Future Directions 9 Pressures
  • Large Indian players move up the value chain
  • Best-shoring (to the most appropriate location)
  • Vendors buying up smaller operators and moving
    into new markets
  • Large players offering services across many
    sectors
  • Client pressure towards multiple suppliers
  • Further development of offshore services globally
  • Continued downward pressure on costs
  • More sub-contracting
  • Neverending search for new sources of skills

51
Future Directions 6 Trends
  • Rising revenues for offshore work, with BPO
    passing ITO soon
  • Multisourcing will continue to be a dominant
    trend, with increased focus on nearshoring (for
    control and proximity to market)
  • India will continue to dominate and China will
    rise, but may struggle to achieve scale in NA and
    EU markets
  • More competition between emerging country
    providers some will succeed, others fail
  • Knowledge process offshoring will increase as
    providers move up the value chain
  • Captive activity will continue

52
Concluding Remarks
  • ITO and BPO are rapidly changing areas
  • There is huge potential and risk
  • Careful planning is essential for success
  • Anyone can play at ITO/BPO
  • India is far ahead Brazil, Russia and China
    have a long way to catch up
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