Monday, October 6, 2008
Offshore Outsourcing: What Role Will the Recession Play?
Monday, September 1, 2008
IT workers hit hardest by offshore outsourcing, survey finds
Jobs most at risk for offshore outsourcing are computer programming, development
The survey, conducted by researchers at the New York University Stern School of Business and the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, also backs up the long-standing view that IT employees in purely technical jobs -- computer programmers and software developers who have little customer interaction -- are at the most risk from offshore outsourcing.
The broad conclusions are unlikely to surprise many high-tech workers, but what may make this offshore outsourcing study unique is its breadth: some 6,700 workers across a variety of occupations and more than 3,000 hiring managers and human resources professionals were surveyed.
There has been a dearth of data about the impact of offshore outsourcing on U.S. workers, and its authors, Prasanna Tambe of the Stern School and Lorin Hitt of Wharton, said their work is the first to pin down offshore outsourcing's impact by occupation.
The job site Careerbuilder.com funded the research, which looked at a spectrum of occupations, including technology, and published initial data from the survey in April. But the 44-page paper, posted this week on the Social Science Research Network (registration required) analyzes what the data is saying about the fate of high-tech workers who have been directly affected by offshore outsourcing.
Tambe, an assistant professor of information, operations and management sciences at NYU, said the data isn't a forecast of how extensive offshore outsourcing will be, but instead tries to fill in the gaps of the theoretical work on offshore outsourcing and address the dearth of data on this topic.
But the impact of offshore outsourcing on IT jobs may just be a sign of how this trend will unfold across a broad range of occupations. "I think [IT] is definitely ahead of the curve, but I think that gap will probably close in the future," Tambe said.
The base rate of offshoring across all industries is just over 15%, but some 40% of all tech and telecommunications companies are doing some type of offshore work, according to the research.
By occupation, more than 30% of the survey respondents said they are offshoring computer programming and software development jobs, but only about half, or 15.5%, reported offshoring systems analysts, who typically interact more with others in a business.
Among employees, across all occupations, slightly more than 4% of workers were displaced because of offshore outsourcing, half the rate of IT workers. The survey's 8% figure for IT displacement represents the percentage of workers who have ever been affected by offshore outsourcing, a rate that implies an annual offshoring-related displacement of 1% to 2% per year for IT workers, according to the study.
Of those displaced by offshore outsourcing, 70% lost their jobs, with older workers more likely to be displaced.
The researchers don't predict what future displacement rates may be, but they say that as offshoring grows, tech workers without jobs that don't require interpersonal skills, are being replaced more rapidly.
IT workers concerned about displacement "can focus on further developing these interpersonal skills, or may find more robust long-term careers in IT professions that involve significant face-to-face interaction such as those involving cross-organizational process change or hands-on support functions," the report's authors wrote.
Since IT workers have been more severely affected than other types of workers, Tambe and Hitt argue that policy-makers could focus on tech workers to provide help, including job training and government compensation to offset wage losses. Educational institutions will have to react as well, with "increased emphasis on the development of interpersonal and management skills within the IT curriculum."
Source:- computerworld.com/Saturday, August 23, 2008
Startup Hacks: 5 Tips for Offshore Outsourcing
Outsourcing product development offshore sounds like a good idea at the time. After all, you can augment your dev group quickly and on the cheap. But it only seems to work under certain conditions; mileage does vary depending on the company. Longer-term enterprise development projects tend to be better suited for outsourcing than shorter-term consumer Internet projects for example (I learned this the hard way). It has to do with development cycles, level of skill required for tasks, time to market, and the ability to iterate.
Arguably, you shouldn’t ever completely outsource your product development. Some things are just too strategic to lose control over. If you do decide to outsource some parts, here are some tips.
1. Hire one of them
Hire someone locally who was originally from the country you’re outsourcing to. Oftentimes different languages or dialects exist in other countries, so be sure your guy speaks the lingo. Also be tuned into other cultural nuances (for example, make sure there aren’t centuries-old bad blood between your guy and the people at the firm you use).
2. Nurture them
You’ll want to take the time and make the investment in having an occasional call or even a visit to the offshore location. Offering a face and voice from the top helps gain buy-in, support and motivation for the project. Obviously if you have to do too much of this, it’s not worth it.
3. Package the tasks
Be mindful not to overwhelm them with a complex project with multiple touch points and dependencies. Have a baked, signed off spec completed and committed to and assign straightforward pieces of it. When you assign something, ask for a time/cost estimate which you can measure back to later. Once the work has been verified and tested you’ll be able to establish a baseline level of quality and performance; from there you’ll be able to give them more rope.
4. Top grade
Offshore dev shops tend to assign you a mixed team of some good folks, some ok folks, and some green folks. These proportions are simply part of their business model. Just don’t let it get the best of your development cycle and product quality. Ask for resumes and interviews of the people they’re assigning to your team.
5. Communicate with one voic
Use the guy from #1 to funnel all communications between your team and theirs. Besides language and time zone issues, there are project management and accountability requirements. The more chiefs you have, the more fingers you have pointing. You can’t afford the he said/she said.
Friday, August 1, 2008
Beyond BPO and into knowledge process outsourcing
Recently this trend has begun to change.
Low-value, 'lift and drop' contracts have run into some severe and well-publicised problems. In the UK, most of us have either had, or heard about, a bad experience with an offshore customer service agent usually suffering from inadequate language skills or a lack of knowledge. On the other side of the fence, the offshore call centre agents themselves often face daunting overnight shifts (to field daytime calls from the other side of the world) and a job offering limited professional challenges to skilled graduates. Under these circumstances it's not surprising that offshore staff attrition rates per year can routinely be over 50% and that serious questions around customer satisfaction and operational stability have become common.
As these problems have hindered the development of offshore call centres and even prompted some organisations like LloydsTSB to use their onshore call centres as a selling point, other factors have led BPO providers to offer more complex, knowledge-based services that sit far closer to the core business. These higher-value processes, while still offering reduced cost, also take advantage of the wider availability of qualified talent in developing countries, exploit the benefits of operating in different time zones and allow added flexibility for ad-hoc or short-term projects.
Moving up the value chain
The issue of global talent is key - onshore availability of skilled graduates, say in the UK, is small compared with a country such as India with an estimated 2.5 million new graduates and 500,000 postgraduates entering the job market every year. The price of this offshore talent is far lower than the UK too. In fact, the wage differential between near and offshore skilled professionals with significant experience is greater than that of the graduates with lower levels of skill and experience traditionally hired into the transaction processing operations like call centres. Bearing this in mind, the higher knowledge-based BPO presents a better business case than low-value deals, albeit on a smaller scale. Crucially, higher-value BPO arrangements give offshore workers a far greater degree of job satisfaction and potential for career progression - helping to address the high attrition rates and customer service issues associated with transactional and support processes. Tasks are typically analytical and require staff to be highly qualified, professional and mature.
With many organisations now operating on a global scale, using third-party talent sourced from worldwide locations also means that business can respond and serve customers regardless of the time zone they operate in. The flexibility of using a third-party BPO provider also allows organisations to easily and quickly scale operations up or down in line with seasonal or otherwise predictable peaks.
Challenging underlying business assumptions
The cost savings offered by high-value BPO deals are important, but arguably of greater significance are the strategic opportunities that were not available with the traditional onshore models. Most human capital-intensive business processes within corporations were designed and based on certain underlying assumptions: about the supply, the demand and the price for talent in the geography where the process was originally based. When this underlying constraint is relaxed through global sourcing, the results can be dramatically different.
The idea is that by applying new knowledge, skill-sets or business savvy that were not previously affordable or available, organisations can enable new services or capabilities that, in the past, could not have been considered feasible. For example, one customer of Cognizant in the healthcare insurance industry has been taking advantage of skilled Indian labour to improve the effectiveness and extent of its investigation of fraudulent claims. Previously, with onshore employees the company wouldn't investigate any cases below $1,000, as the costs involved would outweigh that of the potential fraud itself. Taking advantage of the lower cost of labour has allowed the threshold to be brought down to $500, allowing more leads to be chased and reducing margin leakage.
This 'knowledge process outsourcing' approach should also have benefits for providers - involvement in these areas of a client's business brings greater understanding of business issues and the opportunity to serve clients better. For those outsourcing vendors who also offer IT services, there are opportunities to bundle together different services and offer complete packages to their clients, taking increasing accountability for delivering business outcomes.
Cost remains a strong motivator in outsourcing decisions, but the ability to source global talent to deliver business processes brings new challenges and opportunities. Organisations have to change their decision process to make the most of this worldwide knowledge base. They need to ask themselves, not how much more cheaply and efficiently a particular process can be done, but why they are doing it in the first place and whether they could achieve a different customer 'experience' if they had access to skills, expertise and talent at price points which were not previously possible.
source:- financeweek.co.uk/
How Offshore Outsourcing Affects Customer Satisfaction
The outsourcing of customer service to offshore providers has gotten a lot of bad press in the U.S., with reports citing language problems and the exporting of jobs. But, despite the potential for such reports to alienate consumers, this offshoring continues to grow, driven mainly by the lower labor costs overseas.
Are companies that send customer service abroad making a mistake? It's hard to answer that question without knowing offshoring's actual impact on customer satisfaction.
Our research indicates the effect in most cases is significantly negative -- but similar to the effect of outsourcing customer service domestically. That suggests companies shouldn't necessarily forgo the savings they can reap from offshoring. But if they're going to do it, they'd better do it right.
Negative Numbers
We analyzed the offshoring and outsourcing activities of 150 North American companies and business units from 1998 to 2006. As a group, those that outsourced customer service saw a drop in their score on the American Consumer Satisfaction Index, or ACSI, a measure created by the National Quality Research Center at the University of Michigan. The declines were roughly the same whether companies outsourced customer service domestically or overseas.
ACSI scores tend to move in the same direction as companies' share prices. Based on the historical data showing that connection, the average ACSI decline we found at companies outsourcing customer service is associated with a drop of roughly 1% to 5% in a company's market capitalization, depending on what industry the company is in.
An important step companies can take to improve the quality of outsourced customer service is to ensure that the provider has all the information necessary to help the customer and full authority to do so. Sometimes, because a company wants to protect information about its customers, the customer-service provider isn't given complete customer histories and profiles. Or the provider's authority to resolve complaints is limited; for instance, the provider may not be permitted to grant credits to customers. Companies need to weigh their concerns about information security and financial control against the damage that such arrangements can do to customer satisfaction.
Tapping Technology
Companies can also make customer service more effective by taking advantage of the technological innovations that some providers offer, and here there may sometimes be an advantage in offshoring. That's because some foreign outsourcing providers have offerings their domestic counterparts can't match in terms of technologies that help guide customer service by recognizing patterns in consumer behavior.
One way to mitigate the damage from outsourcing customer service is to invest the money the company saves to improve the quality of the company's products or services, or to cut prices, rather than simply pocket the savings as extra profit. Our findings suggest that this isn't happening in most cases. Among the companies we studied that had outsourced customer service, there was no increase in the perceived-value component of their overall customer-satisfaction score: Their customers didn't feel that they were getting any more for their money than they did before the company started outsourcing.
Here again there may be an advantage in offshoring. If a company can save more by sending customer service overseas, it will have more opportunity to devote at least some of that money to upgrading its business.
In addition to considering whether or not to offshore customer service, companies should consider whether back-office functions such as information technology may be suitable for offshoring. Our study found that back-office offshoring had no effect on overall customer satisfaction. So the savings a company garners this way aren't offset by dissatisfaction among customers.
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