{"id":1182,"date":"2014-01-21T11:09:00","date_gmt":"2014-01-21T11:09:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/localhost\/projects\/horsesforsources\/innovation-cube-farm_012114\/"},"modified":"2014-01-21T11:09:00","modified_gmt":"2014-01-21T11:09:00","slug":"innovation-cube-farm_012114","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.horsesforsources.com\/innovation-cube-farm_012114\/","title":{"rendered":"Innovation starts at the… cube farm"},"content":{"rendered":"
Big data, outcome-pricing, “transformation”, process transmogrification, value thresholding… all big words indicating big ambitions, but they’ll mean squat if your only real strategy is to keep cramming more and more bodies into the same space to drive down costs.<\/p>\n
Non-linear growth and outcome-based services in full swing<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
It may work for United Airlines, but with BPO, all you’ll end up with is the bottom of the barrel choice of talent and more “chop shop” comments<\/a> from Chuckie Schumer. \u00a0And, once you’ve run out of floor space and your company is too cheap to rent more, your only choice will be to hire robots<\/a>, which aren’t programmed to complain about working conditions or undertake industrial action. Unless, of course, they become self-aware and send a re-conditioned Arnold Schwarzenegger on a mission to Nasscom.<\/p>\n So, without further ado, we asked HfS’ own cube-farm specialist Charles Sutherland, to take a look at what the delivery floor of the future may just look like…<\/p>\n Getting Beyond The \u201cLights On\u201d Standard for Delivery Center Floors<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n There can be few places more soul-sapping over time than the standard, traditional shared services or BPO delivery floor made up of endless rows of nearly identical cubicles with a few dated operational metric posters tacked to the walls.\u00a0\u00a0 Whether that\u2019s your daily work environment or you are there on a floor walk as a client or advisor, you probably hoped as the hours passed that the colleagues on the floor were engaging and providing a spark of innovation and excitement otherwise the days (and nights) just seemed to go on forever in these bland and joyless workspaces.<\/p>\n We got to this dire state as a result of a fixation on controllable cost management above all else.\u00a0 In particular by focusing in on the expense components of seat charges to help create \u201cvalue\u201d.\u00a0 And as an industry we were effective, we shrunk the size of cubicles, minimized the \u201cadd-ons\u201d and worried about seat utilizations so that the delivery floor became a predictable and controllable cost in an era lf \u201clights-on-outsourcing\u201d.<\/p>\n Then as an industry we wondered why employee attrition stayed high, why innovation seemed to trickle rather than flow from operations and why our service provider teams weren\u2019t as connected to the business outcomes of our clients as the occasional logo poster above them suggested they should be.<\/p>\n HfS believes that the BPO marketplace is in the midst of a significant change, as the majority of clients have ambitions to move from a model of \u201clights-on outsourcing\u201d to \u201cprogressive outsourcing\u201d.\u00a0 However, many of the elements of \u201cprogressive outsourcing\u201d are so fundamentally different from where this marketplace has been languishing for the last twenty years, there is, in essence, a chasm to cross, in terms of the level of change management needed to discard the legacy enterprise practices and\/or the ageing capability models that are in place throughout much of this industry.<\/p>\n A recent discussion with Accenture sparked the thinking at HfS with regards to how the introduction of new ideas and investments to the delivery center floor plays another important role in this transformation journey towards \u201cprogressive outsourcing\u201d.\u00a0 We noticed that how delivery floors are structured, how the offices and desks are laid out, and the ergonomics of the environment can have a monumental impact on the overall effectiveness of the team and the results that it can achieve.<\/p>\n For all service providers, reforming the model of the BPO delivery floor has the potential to create additional client value and help cross the chasm to \u201cprogressive outsourcing\u201d in four ways:<\/p>\n Charles Sutherland is EVP Research and Guinness, HfS (click for bio)<\/p>\n<\/div>\n Leading service providers are opening up to the possibilities that the delivery floor can be a driver of change in how processes are delivered and the value that is created, and, in doing so, the new delivery floor becomes yet another tool to help move the marketplace towards \u201cprogressive outsourcing\u201d.\u00a0 At HfS we look forward to future floor walks in these delivery centers and discovering all the new benefits they have brought to clients, service providers and employees.<\/p>\n Find more on Accenture\u2019 approach to \u201cThe Delivery Floor of the Future\u201d and our case for moving beyond the \u201clights-on\u201d delivery floor in our new point of view – Innovating the Delivery Floor Model to Help \u201cCross the BPO Chasm\u201d<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n
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