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BPO Deals in the Downturn
28.02.2009 12:13
Published
on Business Finance
(http://businessfinancemag.com)
by John
Cummings Created 10/23/2008 -
19:12
With top-line prospects dimming,
companies are taking another look at outsourcing
their back office functions to cut costs and
protect profitability. We asked Archstone
Consulting principals Mark Schmeling, CFO
advisory services practice leader, and Maureen
Piche, business process outsourcing (BPO)
practice leader, for their insights into the BPO
option now.
BF: As
companies respond to the downturn, are they
stepping up their purchases of F&A
outsourcing services?
Maureen Piche: The
largest companies have been outsourcing some or
all of their back office for a few years now.
They were the early adopters, either through
pure outsourcing or captives. We're now seeing
more of the Fortune 500 and mid-tier companies
seriously considering it, if they're not already
in the process. Outsourcing has become a game
changer; as soon as one company outsources and
significantly reduces its operating expenses,
its peer group feels the pressure.
Given
the recent economic trends, outsourcing is a
strategic imperative for many companies. They
can't afford to get stuck in strategic review
mode. The clock is ticking.
Business
Finance: How quickly can a company push through,
say, a limited F&A offshoring project --
fast enough to make a tangible difference within
the likely duration of the downturn?
MP:
It depends on the complexity of the processes
and systems as well as multi-national
complexities, but a limited F&A deal could
be aggressively executed in, say, three to six
months. And the transition would take about six
to eight weeks before you'd realize any
benefit.
But there are risks inherent in
rushing to contract. Proper data gathering,
detailed statements of work, service level
agreements and due diligence are critical for a
successful BPO contract. Rushing the process
usually ends in post-contract negotiations and
resolution of issues, at which point much of
your negotiating leverage has been
eliminated.
BF: Given that transactional
volume in some processes might decline because
of the slowdown, isn't that a good reason to
hold off on a deal for now?
Mark
Schmeling: One of the key aspects of any
outsourcing initiative is to provide a flexible
back office that accommodates business cycles --
up or down. That helps companies increase or
decrease resources according to market
conditions.
Most contracts incorporate a
range of transaction volume, and within that
range the supplier can't change the pricing;
they have to meet the contractual SLAs. If the
volumes move drastically lower -- or higher,
when business recovers -- there are mechanisms
built into the contract to capture that. A
properly negotiated contract that includes those
mechanisms along with pre-negotiated rates to
calculate the impact of any changes should make
a company feel comfortable that the planned
economics will be achieved, regardless of
transaction volumes.
BF: Is there a
chance that some of the BPO providers themselves
might disappear because of the
downturn?
MP: We may see some
consolidation among the smaller Tier II or Tier
III providers, but market downturns are usually
strong conditions for outsourcing.
We do
see three major challenges for the BPO
providers. First, they need to keep finding new
supplies of cost-competitive, educated, and
multilingual talent. The supply and demand
factors are already driving up rates. So now
we're seeing Vietnam and the Philippines begin
to emerge as new pools of talent, as well as a
critical element of a "follow-the-sun" service
strategy.
The second big challenge is in
ensuring process and protocol standardization as
they expand around the world. Who and where a
call is being answered should be virtually
transparent to the customer.
And the
third is in moving up the value chain of
services. Up till now, the predominant services
being outsourced have been routine transactions
such as A/P and payroll, IT infrastructure
management, application development, help desk,
and so on. We're now seeing the demand for more
value-based services such as category management
for procurement, application management, legal
services, and engineering services.
BF:
If there's a need for bigger cost reductions
now, is there a stronger case for taking a more
transformational approach rather than doing a
bare-bones type of deal?
MS: The answer
really depends on the starting point for a
particular company. If you've already
transformed your back office through shared
services and standardized processes and
technology platforms, then a lift-and-shift
approach is appropriate -- you can still achieve
some respectable cost savings purely from labor
arbitrage, and then incorporate other
productivity improvements over the life of the
contract.
However, many companies still
haven't gone through that type of
transformation. Because of multiple acquisitions
over the past several years, or just lack of
attention, their back offices are still
decentralized, running non-standard processes on
different platforms -- or spreadsheets. These
organizations can greatly benefit from a
transformational type of structure that includes
the labor arbitrage benefit compounded by
process and platform
standardization.
Source URL:
http://businessfinancemag.com/article/bpo-deals-downturn-1023
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