{"id":1086,"date":"2014-12-01T01:13:00","date_gmt":"2014-12-01T01:13:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/localhost\/projects\/horsesforsources\/blueprint-polls-value-beyond-cost_113014\/"},"modified":"2014-12-01T01:13:00","modified_gmt":"2014-12-01T01:13:00","slug":"blueprint-polls-value-beyond-cost_113014","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.horsesforsources.com\/blueprint-polls-value-beyond-cost_113014\/","title":{"rendered":"The raw truth about outsourcing: 83% of outsourcing customers would not go back, despite three-in-four failing to achieve value beyond cost"},"content":{"rendered":"
Some service providers are going to become legacy, some will step up to meet the demands of the As-a-Service Economy<\/a>, and there will be new arrivals in the future to disrupt the market, which may not even have been formed yet.<\/p>\n What is clear, is that two things are going to happen with most outsourcing relationships in the short-medium term: many existing service providers will be switched out, and contractual terms will need to change to reflect the evolving needs of the maturing enterprise buyer.<\/p>\n During the recent Chicago HfS Blueprint sessions, we asked the enterprise buyers to express how they viewed outsourcing service providers and the nature of their relationships. \u00a0As we revealed last week, a good number of buyers (43%) admit they should give up more high value work and responsibility to their providers<\/a>,\u00a0 but are struggling to let go because of the change and trust issues at play. However, when probed further, over four-fifths of service buyers would choose not to reverse<\/em> their outsourcing decisions, and, instead, would make changes to their current contractual terms (44%) or simply look to change provider (33%):<\/p>\n Click to Enlarge<\/p>\n<\/div>\n What this signifies, is that outsourcing is the start of a new way of working for enterprises, but does not provide all<\/em> the answers in the early days – it sets the agenda for how they intend<\/em> to operate in the future, where third-parties provide lower operational costs, increased scale and – hopefully – added capability. However, what is clear, in the initial phases of outsourcing, is that achieving lower cost and added scalability of resources are the real outcomes three quarters of service buyers actually expect:<\/p>\nThere is good news – and challenging news – for outsourcing buyers, service providers and advisors: \u00a0most enterprises are pleased they moved into an outsourcing model, but have recognized they need to make significant changes to the way they manage their service provider relationships, if they are to realize real value in the future.<\/em><\/p>\n
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