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Global Sourcing of Knowledge Work Communicators

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Title: IDSc 6060 Author: Mani Subramani Last modified by: Training Services Created Date: 2/26/2004 2:04:06 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Global Sourcing of Knowledge Work Communicators


1
Global Sourcing of Knowledge Work Communicator
s Forum, Spring WorkshopMarch 16, 2006
  • Mani Subramani, Associate Professor
  • Carlson School of Management
  • msubramani_at_csom.umn.edu

2
About Me
  • Mani Subramani, Associate Professor
  • Information and Decision Sciences Dept
  • PhD from Boston University
  • 7 yrs in Computer Industry
  • Researcher at MISRC (UoM), CISR (MIT)
  • Research Interests
  • Leveraging Intangible Assets, Interorganizational
    Relationships
  • Teaching Managing Globally, course with 2 week
    trip to India

3
Agenda
  • Global Sourcing of Knowledge Work
  • Enabling Factors
  • Responding to the Challenge

4
Global Sourcing of Capabilities
  • Simple Managerial/Economic Logic
  • Disaggregation of Complex Business Processes
  • IT Enabled Ability to Leverage Expertise
    Irrespective of Location
  • Outcomes
  • Changes to Mix of Valued Skills
  • Complex Social Consequences
  • Complex Consequences for Individual Knowledge
    Workers

5
Sourcing Flexibility
  • Labor-intensive, Routine Professional Work
  • Technical Writing, Editing
  • Instructional Design
  • Illustration, Graphic Design, Digital Animation
    Production
  • X-ray Interpretation, Diagnosis
  • Routine Knowledge Work in Business Processes
  • Accounting, Auditing
  • Financial Reporting (Reuters)
  • Software Development
  • Non-Routine Knowledge Work (e.g. RD)
  • Motorola, Intel, GE, Microsoft, AvesthaGen

6
Markets vs. Hierarchies
  • Key Determinants of Governance of Activity
  • Production Costs Transaction Costs
  • Markets have production cost advantages
  • Advantages Scale Economies, Expertise
  • Disadvantages Transaction Costs
  • Search, Bargaining, Negotiation
  • Firms have transaction cost advantages
  • Shared Vocabulary, Specialized Expertise
  • Make vs. Buy f (overall cost)

Costs like friction, reduce efficiency
7
  • Content Worldwide - Presentations From India
  • By Sanjay Sharma, Section Computer Gupshup
    Posted on Mon Sep 20th, 2004 at 080335 PM EST
  • The global business consultancy firm McKinsey
    Company is sourcing all its Powerpoint and
    multimedia presentation for business pitching,
    out of its IT enabled service unit Visual
    Graphics India (VGI) in Chennai's Tidel Park.
  • It is saving work hours of consultants who were
    spending substantial time on preparing eye
    catching presentations. VGI is open 24 hours a
    day, seven days a week, with 300 professionals
    who provide McKinsey's 6,200 consultants with
    graphics and visuals. They also create visual
    communication tools like graphics, charts,
    exhibits, overhead transparencies, on-screen
    animated presentations, and multi-media products
    for its 82 offices in 44 countries.
  • Globally, McKinsey works with over 400 companies
    and many governments.

8
ABC Nightline.Outsourcing
9
Modularity
  • Digitization enhances process modularity
  • Make vs. Buy, Location decision about each module
  • E.g. Customer Service Taking Calls, Managing
    Call Centre, Monitoring Customer Complaints,
    Responding to Customer
  • Accounts Payables
  • Receive Invoices, Examine Invoices and Act,
    Feedback
  • Technical Communications
  • Process Standardization in Consortia
  • Ease of specification of tasks

10
IT shifts Diffusion Curve
?
CODIFIED
UNCODIFIED
DIFFUSED
?
ABSTRACT
UNDIFFUSED
CONCRETE
Greater diffusion at lower levels of
codification, abstraction
11
Waves of Change
  • First Order Effects Direct, Predictable
  • E.g. Creation of Highway System in US..streamline
    commerce
  • Supply points can be far from Demand points
  • Economies of scale/specialization
  • Broader development in country, better resource
    usage
  • Second Order Effects Complex, Diffuse,
    Unpredictable
  • Cascaded Chain.Complex effect of effects
  • Highway System in US
  • changes in patterns of living (suburbs),
    white-flight from cities, inner city crime
  • Realized largely in Hindsight
  • Product of Behavioral responses to changes

12
Changes due to Technology..(1)
  • Source of Change Convergence of Technology
  • Computing, Communications Technologies
  • Network Infrastructure Supporting Mobility,
    Connectivity
  • First Order Effects Revolution in Control
  • Work anywhere, anytime
  • Why come to the office?.. Telecommuting
  • Organizational Restructuring (Bus Process
    Re-engineering)
  • Streamlined Processes, Redistribution of Tasks
  • Empowerment, Flattening of Hierarchy
  • Reduced Organization Size (cutting the fat!)
  • Competition at the level of the Value Chain
  • Network vs. Network

13
Changes due to Technology(2)
  • Second Order Effects Complex, Indirect
  • Greater Modularity of Business Processes
  • Transformation of Work, Expectations
  • Reduced relevance of location
  • Integration of labor markets across the globe
  • Organizations leverage resources globally
  • Fundamental changes in organization of work
  • Fundamental changes in structure of economy
  • Production economy -gt knowledge based economy
    creating intangible products, services

14
Consequences
  • Integration of Labor Markets
  • Location/Context Independent Skills less valuable
    in developing economies
  • Mix of Employee Skills Migrates to Specialized,
    Context-Specific Activities
  • Job Growth in Higher-Skill Categories in US Firms
  • Engineering firm able to bid on projects lt100K by
    moving drafting offshore
  • News from IBM 3000 jobs offshore in 2004
  • Plans to add 4500 positions in US
  • Each offshored - 1.12-1.14 in benefits to US
    economy

15
Job Losses..
  • All at-risk jobs in the economy 13.5 M (2002,
    BLS)
  • 3.3M jobs moving offshore by 2015 (Forrester)
  • 2M financial sector jobs offshored by 2009
    (Deloitte)
  • Total jobs in the economy 127 M in 2002
  • 400K jobs moving offshore in 2004 (poll)

Job losses are small compared to overall size of
US economy (0.2)
16
Entry level salaries for grads sharply up ,
SiliconIndia    Monday, October 10, 2005 NEW
DELHI In the last five years the salary package
being offered to the students passing out from
courses such as Bachelor of Business
Administration (BBA) and Bachelor of Computer
Sciences (BCS) across the country has increased
fourfold... The feedback from different
universities indicated that the starting salary
offered to a young graduate has gone up from 60
in 2000 to 250 in 2004. In this the firms
visiting university campuses for recruitment are
from the IT and ITES sectors, study says.
Salary levels for the Bachelor in Computer
Applications or B.Sc (Information Science)
streams have gone up to 250- 350 in the years
2003-04 and 2004-05. Apart from IT and ITeS firms
companies from hospitality, banking and finance
industry have also started visiting institutions
for campus recruitments. In this the major
companies are Infosys, TCS, Wipro, Cognizant,
Dell Computers, iGate, ICICI Bank, CRISIL,
ABN-Amro Bank..
17
What Is Not Moveable?
  • In-person services (Reich 1990)
  • Activities involving interaction with customers,
    suppliers, designers, or production facilities
  • Activities where knowledge is derived from
    intensive, iterative interaction with the market
    or environment, e.g., clusters of professionals
    with specific talents

18
Challenges
  • In the firm there is a pyramid of talent what
    is location dependent?
  • How can the location dependent component leverage
    advantage of offshore support?

Need to evolve into a Strategic Contributor
Proactive, Innovative, Flexible
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