{"id":4668,"date":"2009-01-03T14:56:00","date_gmt":"2009-01-03T14:56:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/localhost\/projects\/horsesforsources\/another-vote-for-ditching-the-o-word\/"},"modified":"2009-01-03T14:56:00","modified_gmt":"2009-01-03T14:56:00","slug":"another-vote-for-ditching-the-o-word","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.horsesforsources.com\/another-vote-for-ditching-the-o-word\/","title":{"rendered":"Another vote for ditching the \u201cO\u201d word"},"content":{"rendered":"
Our <\/em><\/span>super-charged discussion<\/em><\/span><\/a> on using more relevant terminology to describe global services delivery took on another twist yesterday, when the WSJ published <\/span>yet another piece<\/span><\/a> about how the outsourcing market is "taking a hit", citing TPI\u2019s large-deal data for 3Q08. This follows on from <\/span>another recent article<\/span><\/a> from the same journalist, who appears determined to announce the demise of "outsourcing" to the world.<\/span><\/span><\/span><\/em><\/p>\n My colleague Dana Stiffler<\/a> lends her weight to the argument:<\/span><\/p>\n "<\/a>The number of $25M+ deals signed <\/p>\n <\/p>\n in that quarter was the lowest in six years, a disturbing factoid indeed. If you stick to the old-school definitions of outsourcing, it\u2019s easy to understand why headlines like these are so prevalent these days. They\u2019re alarming, and we\u2019re drawn to them. But the demise of large, traditional outsourcing contracts is a trend that\u2019s been underway for years. Stories like the Journal\u2019s \u2013 and broad-brush analyst research on outsourcing for that matter — makes coverage of these markets suspect, in good times and in bad. Are we all even talking about the same thing? <\/p>\n Well said Dana. The "O" terminology is clearly misunderstood in many circles. As Dana points out, "global delivery of services is now a structural requirement". The politically-charged issues surrounding the offshoring of US-jobs is clouding the real issue regarding what businesses need to do to be effective competitively on a global level. Businesses need to take advantage of global talent and resources to be competitive, and should not be penalized in this vein. The challenge for the incoming Obama administration is to create incentives for US businesses to deploy US staff, and not penalize a global services strategy. That means the US needs to be more competitive within a global context – something Detroit's automakers<\/a> might need to focus on if they want to find a way out of their current predicament.<\/em><\/p>\n Update: Peter Allen clarifies TPI data:<\/strong><\/p>\n Dana and Phil … seeing as how that article formed a conclusion based on data published almost three months ago, and covering one Quarter in the year, one might have hoped for a bit more journalistic thoroughness.<\/p>\n Yes, Q3's contract awards were the softest in quite some time. Dramatically soft.<\/p>\n But, Q4 picked up quite nicely. Like most Q4's tend to do. In fact, while the numbers aren't completely tallied, I am estimating that 2008's full-year record of TCV awarded will surpass that of 2007. (To wit: while Q3 yielded only around $14B in TCV, the month of October alone surpassed $15B!)<\/p>\n<\/strong><\/span>"Well, no. The headline refers to a contract size and type that is in decline. And other points in the piece were spot-on: less project spending, more delays in big-ticket decisions. But the article does not mention that this has been counterbalanced by sustained interest in expanding IT support relationships. Broader resource pressures, particularly around ERP, continue to force spending in the mid-market. I guess there\u2019s not much of a headline in the fact that the third-party business and IT services market continues to grow, albeit more slowly, or that global delivery of services is now a structural requirement in companies\u2019 global operations, and that there\u2019s no escaping it. Problem is, none of this fits tidily under a traditional \u201coutsourcing\u201d heading. It\u2019s time for the \u201cO\u201d word to go."<\/p>\n