{"id":2525,"date":"2021-09-05T20:13:00","date_gmt":"2021-09-05T20:13:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/localhost\/projects\/horsesforsources\/outsourcing-amazon-2021_090521\/"},"modified":"2022-04-26T17:16:37","modified_gmt":"2022-04-26T17:16:37","slug":"outsourcing-amazon-2021_090521","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.horsesforsources.com\/outsourcing-amazon-2021_090521\/","title":{"rendered":"Offshore has become Walmart… as Outsourcing becomes more like Amazon"},"content":{"rendered":"
We’re operating in a short-term period between the “world that was and the one we’re emerging into”… there’s some feel-good that we survived a pandemic, but the hard change, the very survival of companies’ business models and peoples’ careers starts now<\/em>. <\/p>\n
And we can’t get there without the help of partners to plug the skills and resource gaps that will help out businesses make this pivotal shift to survive in this Virtual Economy…<\/p>\n
Services are increasingly about accessing skills that are not ubiquitous in a traditional offshore model<\/span><\/p>\n
In the Virtual Economy, no one cares much about “offshore” as a strategy – it has become part of the fabric of managing a global operating model, where operations leaders just tap into whatever global resource they need to achieve their desired outcomes. This doesn’t mean that traditional “offshore” global delivery locations, such as India and the Philippines, are going bust overnight. But it does mean the playing field is leveling out as the need for emerging skills trumps the desire simply to reduce labor costs.<\/p>\n
Our recent HFS Pulse Data of more than 800 major global enterprises is showing the focus on offshoring has sipped behind onshore, nearshore – and even most profoundly – agnostic-shore as enterprises look to realign their operating models:<\/p>\n