{"id":5256,"date":"2022-11-24T05:28:45","date_gmt":"2022-11-24T05:28:45","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.horsesforsources.com\/outsourcing-oxygen_032822-copy\/"},"modified":"2023-02-08T17:27:52","modified_gmt":"2023-02-08T17:27:52","slug":"outsourcing-time-to-shine_112422","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.horsesforsources.com\/outsourcing-time-to-shine_112422\/","title":{"rendered":"Outsourcing will shine or fail as we combat this global assault on our stability"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/p>\n
The assault on everything we once knew as stable is now in full throttle, choking the very life out of businesses whose leaders are struggling to find immediate answers to many emerging problems.\u00a0 There has never been a time when third-party help has been so needed to help businesses drowning in spiraling inflation, wages and energy costs, crippled by attrition, tormented by cyber criminals and new compliance regulations, and under massive pressure to drive down operating costs.\u00a0 Net-net, enterprises are desperately in need of access to skills and capabilities just to keep their business operations viable as they fight this global assault on their survival.<\/p>\n
The whole focus on pricing and scoping outsourcing engagements is being completely rethought, as are the strategies of the leading service providers to support them. The IT and BPO services industry is reaching its most defining moment since Jack Welch doubled down on India in the 1990s.<\/p>\n
The challenge facing outsourcers is three-fold:<\/p>\n
Invest in technology but sell services.\u00a0<\/strong> Many services firms have been talking about Business Process as a Service (BPaaS) for years, while others have made software investments and attempted to resell licenses to customers and bundle their services on top.\u00a0 The stark reality is that enterprise customers do not want to buy<\/em> technology products from services firms – and services firms are not good at selling<\/em> technology products either (requires a completely different channel and capability set).<\/p>\n The answer actually lies in services firms building technology-enabled service delivery themselves but only exposing and charging their customer for the services they consume or data\/outcomes they need.\u00a0 For example, if a services firm wants to provide customer support services to smaller-scale enterprises, it could build its own<\/em> CX platform that utilizes digital assistants, automates workflows, runs smart analytics etc., which all contribute to the enterprise client receiving efficient, low-cost services and the data they need to make decisions.\u00a0 If the provider has to partner with an expensive CRM platform, it is stuck with only making revenues from providing the people-effort<\/em>, and has little incentive to automate to drive down costs and improve workflows.\u00a0 Hence the service provider can differentiate themselves by selling cost-effective services and providing the data its clients need.\u00a0 Why should their clients care about the people-effort being provided if they get exactly what they want at a price they are happy to pay?\u00a0 This is why we have been defining the emerging market for Business Data Services<\/a> as the new generation of BPM, where enterprises pay for outcomes and data.<\/p>\n Control attrition, which is critical to stay in the game.\u00a0<\/strong> If service providers can\u2019t keep their workers and have them deliver more value to their clients, they will end up in a zero-sum race to the bottom, and many are already losing business because their clients are not tolerating the attrition and the impact on delivery quality. Net-net, we are in a war to retain people to keep our businesses functioning, and this is likely to be the case for several years to come as people reject employers who fail to develop them, pay them well, and offer them career expansion.\u00a0 This is especially the case for staff working in operational roles<\/a>, whether it\u2019s part of a shared services organization or a professional services firm.\u00a0 Smart service providers are getting ahead of this with increased investments in their talent development efforts, wage increases across the board, and announcements of plans to open new service delivery centers in locations with pools of concentrated talent that can be fast-tracked into their model.\u00a0 We are also seeing several service providers target talent from community colleges and high schools, where they can offer them their own development experience that is highly relevant to their clients’ needs.\u00a0 Most importantly, service providers must invest in training their managers to develop their staff effectively in today’s hybrid work environment.\u00a0 The old style of “check the box” management that may have worked in the old factory model is failing.<\/p>\n