QUARTA-FEIRA
66
25 DE NOVEMBRO DE 2009
ANO 1 l N º 6
INNOVATION DURING A
RECESSION
mysimpleprocesses.com
New York Stocks
A new survey-based research report from
CFO Research Services sheds some light
on how CFOs and IT are working together
to prepare for economic recovery. Pág. 3
Pelo Mundo
The world had pass through important
economic changes. This is a period of
profit-focused cost cutting. Innovation
needs to be a priority for companies in
this period of recession and ought to be
a crucial element in a firm’s recession
strategy. It will allow them to do more
with less and to generate profit by
exploiting existing resources. See more
on page 2.
Europa
Forbes.com - 02.11.09
PRNewswire - 29.09.09
Despite the pressure to remain
competitive by cutting costs, there are
risks associated with the strategy of
outsourcing. pág. 4
.
Competition hots up for European shared
service & contact centre investment, according
to ―International Shared Services and Contact
Centres:
International
Strategies
&
Benchmarking Study‖. pág 3.
Ásia
Malaysia National News Agency - 04.
11.09
The government aims to make Malaysia
the preferred global SSO (shared
services and outsourcing) hub by 2010,
yielding a targeted export revenue of
RM6 billion a year, said National SME
Development Council (NSDC). pág. 6
.
Brasil
Jornal Cruzeiro do Sul - 27.10.09
Com expectativa de gerar mil empregos
diretos e outros 4 mil indiretos, a
empresa
norte-americana
Emerson
Process Management ampliará sua
unidade em Sorocaba. pág. 3
It is also important for firms to use new technology and
cheaper options for collaboration. Leveraging Web 2.0 in
the enterprise can be one option. Let me give you a clearer
example. It is critical for companies to understand how
customers reassess priorities, reallocate funds, switch
brands and redefine value of products and services. Web
2.0 platforms can be both a source of information and a
channel to facilitate this kind of collaboration in a cost
effective way.
Estados Unidos
Innovation During a Recession
mysimpleprocesses.com
by Glenn Remoreras
Innovation is bringing creative ideas to life. It occurs in the
organizational context when individuals and teas work to
spark new product development, to implement new
technology and even to transform the organization.
Innovation is always linked to performance and growth
through incremental improvements in efficiency,
productivity, quality and services. On the other hand, it is
also associated with radical improvement like inventions,
new products and radical changes in the business model. It is
a balance of incremental improvements and radical
innovations that keep the company competitive in a
changing world.
Leveraging Shared Services
If it’s all about cost reduction and economies of scale, it’s
probably the best time to implement Shared Services. In
these demanding times, companies are challenging
themselves to discover business processes and business
models that will open undiscovered synergies. Shared
Services could be the answer to companies keenly looking
for convergence and streamlining of an organization’s
functions.
We are on the brink of important change in the world— and
it is economic in nature. We have seen massive job cuts,
company bankruptcies, budget reductions, etc. We are in a
period of profit-focused cost cutting. Innovation may be a
low priority for many companies in this period of recession
but I think it is a big mistake. Innovation ought to be a
crucial element in a firm’s recession strategy. It will allow
them to do more with less and to generate profit by
exploiting existing resources.
Shared Services has to ensure that they deliver the services
required of them as effectively and efficiently as possible.
In a recession, this convergence enables the appreciation
of economies of scale within the function and can enable
multi-function collaboration where there is the potential to
create more synergies. A word of caution though, a Shared
Services implementation involves a large scale cultural and
process transformation; it must come with a well-planned
organizational transformation and change management
strategy.
Two kinds of Innovation that are especially valuable in a
recession:
In a nutshell
Internal and External Collaboration
Greater internal collaboration– between departments and
business units, as well as external collaboration– with
customers and suppliers, are essential if companies are to
stay healthy during the recession. For example, internal
collaboration could result to a Cross Selling strategy that
could increase sales to the existing captured market while
lowering cost of selling. Collaboration can be a channel for
transfer of best practices between operating units. Internal
Collaboration can also result to inter-business-unit product
innovation by creating new products and services from
existing knowledge, technologies, products and brands.
External collaboration, specifically with key entities of your
supply chain network – from suppliers to customer, is vital
to staying in business during a recession. The big challenge
to firms is to reduce cost while maintaining service levels.
Businesses need to have open communication with suppliers
and customers alike and ensure a more effective and efficient
supply chain.
Shared Services has been around for years and companies
have always strived to collaborate — internally and
externally. I think the emphasis this time should be
precision, timing, and bringing the best ideas forward.
Forward looking and innovation-focused companies are
seeing the light at the end of the tunnel. I strongly believe
that this is the best time for innovation, for breakthrough
value and for paradigm shifts. This is the best time to
position your company ahead of the pack when the
economy regains momentum again.
www.institutodegestao.com.br
2
executives expressed positive investment intentions in the
longer term.
Europa
Competition hots up for European shared service
& contact centre investment
LONDON, PRNewswire - 29.09.09
Executives involved in site selection decisions for contact
and shared service centres servicing the European market,
are facing uncertain market conditions, but the choice of
suitable locations is increasing, according to ―International
Shared Services and Contact Centres: International Strategies
& Benchmarking Study‖ by consulting firms Oxford
Intelligence and IBM-Plant Location International.
Roel Spee, Global Leader, IBM-PLI said; ―In the future it is
clear that there will be an ever-widening scope in location
competition for both shared services but especially for
contact centres.‖ The next generation of investment
locations will be in Latin America, North Africa, other CEE
countries (e.g. Balkans, Baltics, Belarus, Bulgaria, Ukraine)
and additional APAC locations – China, Indonesia, Thailand,
Vietnam as well as second and third tier cities in India and
the Philippines.
In the short term, senior executives were cautiously
confident about future plans, with 55% of SSCs and 72% of
CCs with firm international investment plans through to
2010 while only 53% of SSC executives and 37% of CC
Brasil
Empresa deve gerar 4 mil empregos com ampliação
Jornal Cruzeiro do Sul - 27.10.09
Por Thiago Arioza
Com expectativa de gerar mil empregos diretos e outros 4
mil indiretos, a empresa norte-americana Emerson Process
Management ampliará sua unidade em Sorocaba a partir do
investimento de R$ 60 milhões. As obras de ampliação em
45 mil metros da unidade já existente na avenida
Hollingsworth, no bairro Iporanga, deverá ser iniciada no
primeiro trimestre de 2010 e concluída em até dois anos,
tornando-se sede da empresa no Brasil. A previsão é de que
o número de funcionários dobre quando a fábrica estiver
pronta.
O reforço nas atividades da Emerson no País foi anunciado
na tarde desta terça-feira (27), quando dirigentes do Brasil e
dos Estados Unidos se reuniram com o Prefeito Vitor Lippi
na assinatura do Protocolo de Intenções. Segundo os
28 locations across 21 different countries in Western
Europe, CEE and offshore locations in India, the Far
East, Africa and Latin America, were benchmarked in the
study. Cities such as Amsterdam, Marseilles, Barcelona,
Manchester, Berlin, Glasgow, Liverpool, Dublin,
Maastricht, Belfast, Leeds and Madrid are well-positioned,
according to the study.
―Western European locations still have a strong
proposition for more complex and higher value facilities‖
said Michel Lemagnen, Research Director, Oxford
Intelligence. Companies will continue to develop the most
efficient processes in the traditional Western European
centres and then to migrate or outsource non-core, lower
risk and low value-added functions to lower cost
solutions. (be that in-house, outsourced or virtual).
For the better-established CEE locations the coming years
will be challenging due to executive perceptions on
overheating, salary inflation and a decline in overall
efficiency. It is the newer locations that will provide the
next wave of competitive CEE locations. Asian locations
have been most successful in attracting larger contact
centres whilst Europe, has attracted far smaller facilities.
New investments are more likely to occur in locations that
have a large and sustainable workforce with the right skills
and in those locations where labour laws are favourable.
executivos, a companhia planeja consolidar suas funções
de serviços compartilhados no novo empreendimento,
incluindo os setores de finanças, administração, jurídico,
TI, marketing, logística e atendimento ao cliente.
"Esperamos que o investimento dobre nosso faturamento
em três anos e apesar da economia global enfrentar um
momento de crise a Emerson já não está mais nesta fase",
declarou Edward Monser, representante americano que
destacou a capacidade de recrutar e reter engenheiros em
suas empresas.
Para o secretário municipal de Desenvolvimento
Econômico, Mário Tanigawa, "o crescimento da cidade é
compatível com o desenvolvimento nos diversos setores,
especialmente na educação, um dos fatores que estimulou
a multinacional a escolher Sorocaba como sede no Brasil".
A companhia está presente no Brasil desde 1972, onde
instalou suas cinco unidades que operam para o
suprimento de tecnologias para diversos setores. Desde
1995 em Sorocaba a empresa produz fluxímetros, válvulas
e transmissores utilizados para melhorar a eficiência das
operações dentro unidades de fabricação, como
refinariam.
www.institutodegestao.com.br
3
That's particularly true in the CIO's world. Just having an
MBA and an expensive coffee habit doesn't mean the
person is a fit for a company's culture or is committed to
making sure it moves in the right direction. And while
bringing in new blood can often be a good thing, it's not
necessarily the best thing.
Pelo Mundo
The Other Side Of Outsourcing
Forbes.com - 02.11.09
Everyone's doing it, so why shouldn't you? They're taking
servers from the data center, consolidating some with
virtualization, co-locating others through a third party and
handing others off to cloud-hosting companies.
The pitch from the cloud providers, as well as the softwareas-a-service companies, is that no one should be doing what
isn't their core competency. And besides, no one has the
manpower left to effectively run all these servers or learn the
applications as well as the companies that develop them or
deal with them every day. For the CIO, it's also a good way
to tell the CEO and CFO that you've been able to slash costs
and apply those dollars for better purpose.
But how do you know when you've outsourced too much?
Where do you draw the line between more expertise on the
outside and core competencies on the inside?
What happens when a server running 60 virtual machines
crashes or the cloud provider has a hiccup and data gets lost
and you don't have anyone left internally who knows
anything about the problem?
Despite the pressure to remain competitive by cutting costs,
there are risks associated with that strategy. In fact, the pitch
for clouds and outsourcing of all sorts sounds remarkably
similar to the arguments for offshoring manufacturing,
application development and services in the 1990s. Some of
it worked as planned, but certainly not all of it--and not all
the time.
So what can go wrong? First of all, it's far easier to cut
people than to hire them. It's always tough to get budget
approval for increased headcount. It's also hard to get people
to move without some major incentives when they're already
gainfully employed. One of the top jobs in Silicon Valley in
the 1980s and 1990s was vice president of human resources.
The engineering and business leaders that showed up in the
Valley were largely the result of some extremely talented HR
people.
Many companies already have outsourced their HR
personnel--or at least many of the functions inside HR--and
the search for new people is now largely in the hands of
search firms. While these people can do their jobs well
enough, they certainly don't have an inside feel for the
culture of a company and what makes it tick.
Second, there's a crossover point inside companies. Each
one is different, so there's no way to create a formula for
this, but the key metric is what's commonly described as
critical mass inside departments. That critical mass is
essential for doing more than just maintaining the status
quo, which is often what happens when companies
outsource too much. Growth requires a core of people
who get together and discuss what needs to be done and
how to get those things done, and it requires people to do
the work. Granted, not all the work has to be done inhouse, but at least some of it does or what you get is a
canned product instead of something that really makes IT
invaluable to the business units within a company.
Third, keeping things in-house doesn't prevent data
leakage and defections to other companies, but it certainly
helps. The more that escapes out the door, or over the
corporate network, the more likely it will end up in the
hands of competitors. And that happens no matter how
good the agreements are with outside service providers.
Some of it is simply leaking of information. Some of it is
wholesale theft. And the more companies move data back
and forth, the more opportunity there is to steal it.
No one wants to talk about that, aside from the people
selling security solutions. But dig into any company, and
you'll find people who worry about these kinds of
breaches and how to ratchet down security in particularly
sensitive areas while treating others with standard
solutions they know don't work anymore. And they agree,
almost universally, that outsourcing can make the
problems worse.
And finally, there's the unmeasurable aspect of what
happens when a company is no longer a culture but an
amalgamation of outsourcing partners. They may add
great efficiency into the business, but they generally add
nothing to the long-term vision. As most companies that
have been around awhile are aware, great ideas don't
always come from the people at the top. Outsourcing can
eliminate an entire interaction layer that is impossible to
measure with objective tools. Cultures are inextricably
linked to innovation and quality, and the less there is of
the former the more the latter two will suffer in the long
term.
www.institutodegestao.com.br
4
Pelo Mundo
CFOs, IT Collaborate Around Technology
Investments | channelinsider.com – 03.11.09
Focus on cost reduction is leading IT and
finance to forge a closer relationship, and the
two are working closely together to identify,
evaluate and approve projects that provide
measurable and tangible return in improving
efficiency and productivity.
A new survey-based research report from CFO Research
Services, released today, sheds some light on how CFOs and
IT are working together to prepare for economic recovery. A
close look at the survey results indicate new IT trends will
emerge as economic recovery continues.
The report evaluates the survey results of 198 senior finance
executives across the globe. Survey responders include
representatives from big name companies through North
America, Asia and Europe like 3M, Kraft Foods and
McLaren Automotive. Respondents shared their views of
IT’s role and business value to their organizations as well as
the dominant business criteria for making purchase
decisions.
It’s no big surprise results indicate companies are under
pressure to cut costs. More surprisingly is the indication that
most companies’ fundamental commitment to IT investment
is still strongly intact. Underscoring that point, most
respondents affirm that IT’s key role is two-fold: to improve
efficiency and provide a competitive advantage. The
enterprise’s focus on cost reduction is leading IT and finance
to forge a closer and more collaborative relationship, and the
two are working closely together to identify, evaluate and
approve projects that provide measurable and tangible return
in improving efficiency and productivity.
Companies are looking at technology and the subsequent
operational efficiency it provides as a potential way out of
the downturn. 71 percent of respondents also believe that IT
and its operations are absolutely essential to their
competitive positioning as the economy rebounds.
One respondent, a Belgian CFO in the real estate sector,
shared, ―IT is seen as an enabler to add value to the business
and is taken more seriously as a possible way out of the
downturn.‖
Although it may often seem that budgets have dried up,
respondents said IT commitments made before the
economic downturn are holding steady in most
companies. 58 percent of respondents say that their
companies remain committed to most IT projects
approved prior to the downtown. 39 percent of
respondents said project delays and scaling back is
occurring at their companies, but they are still planning on
forging ahead with the projects. Only 2 percent of
respondents say their organizations are stopping IT
projects without any expectation of restarting them.
3M’s director of finance for the industrial and
transportation division, Ippocratis Vrohidis, said that, ―IT,
just like any other function, has been asked to prioritize
projects and raise the bar on what projects get accepted.‖
He continued, ―For some projects, we have slowed down
spending, but for the most part if it is a strategic project,
we are moving forward with it.‖
When asked what IT Investments would prove most
valuable as the economy improves, respondents cited
improvements in administrative efficiencies as well as
solutions that boost employee productivity. Respondents
also said the most important metric for return on an IT
projects is that it contributes to gains in efficiency (70
percent) and to cost savings (68 percent).
In this economic environment, most companies are
looking to modify rather than replace existing critical
business systems. At the top of the list of infrastructure
that is most likely to be replaced rather than modified is
ERP Systems (71 percent) and the IT Shared Services
Center (71 percent). In good news for CRM vendors,
CRM systems are still getting the replacement nod as well
as web and ecommerce initiatives.
When deciding to move forward on a project, survey
results indicate that finance is partial to projects that will
produce a swift and positive return on investment. 64
percent of respondents say they are very likely to consider
the amount of time projected to realize ROI when making
IT investments. Further, when asked about criteria given
to IT investment decisions, respondents said they are
much more likely to give ―a great deal of consideration‖ to
an investment’s near-term benefits (34 percent) rather
than long-term, difficult-to-measure benefits (19 percent).
A solid majority of respondents said that it’s at least
somewhat difficult to measure the ROI on IT projects. 27
percent said it’s very difficult.
Vrohidis of 3M shed some light on why it is so difficult, ―I
think the hardest part is to quantify projects that you
know in your gut make sense but whose benefits span
across the organization—making it difficult to justify the
cost of the project for any one business unit,‖ he said.
www.institutodegestao.com.br
5
Trends show that as companies evaluate projects, they
need to see the project’s effect across the whole of the
enterprise. This need is leading finance, business owners
and IT to work closer together to define metrics and apply
them to potential projects.
The report was sponsored by application management
vendor Micro Focus.
Ásia
Plan to make Malaysia SSO hub by 2010
Malaysia National News Agency - 04. 11.09
NSDC said the A.T. Kearney Study ranked Malaysia the
world's third most attractive location for outsourcing
centre, after India and China.
It said Gartner ranked Malaysia as Asia Pacific's fourth
leading location for outsourcing activities due to
favourable government support and infrastructure,
political and economic stability as well as availability of
labour pool as among the main advantage.
"Malaysia is a natural choice for outsourcing due to
attractive cost structure and business environment among
emerging markets as well as high levels of global
integration," it said.
The government aims to make Malaysia the preferred
global SSO (shared services and outsourcing) hub by 2010,
yielding a targeted export revenue of RM6 billion a year,
said National SME Development Council (NSDC).
In its annual SME Report 2008 released today, the NSDC
said the SSO sector was expected to contribute
significantly to gross domestic product, investment as well
as
employment.
It said under the Ninth Malaysia Plan, the government
aimed to attract local companies to undertake high-end
SSO-related services in the areas of marketing, project
management, product development and supply chain.
"To complement this initiative, the government provides
attractive incentive package (for MSC Malaysia-status
companies and operational headquarters) and other
assistance to enable local outsourcing firms to acquire
world-class competencies, have access to greater offshore
markets and expand their operations," it said.
The report said the legal framework for intellectual
property rights protection would be also be strengthened
to enhance the environment for outsourcing activity.
It said the worldwide market for SSO was huge, around
US$1 trillion (US$1=RM3.39) per year, and was expected
to increase to US$1.5 trillion in future, driven by
liberalisation of the services sector.
In Malaysia, the outsourcing activities began since early
1990s, with the establishment of operational headquarters,
international procurement centres and regional distribution
centres, it said.
It said Malaysia has already established itself as a premier
outsourcing destination.
www.institutodegestao.com.br
Editores
Rodrigo Lang | Vanessa Saavedra
Conselho Editorial
Caio Fiuza
Eduardo Saggioro
Vitor Marques
Contato
pesquisas@visagio.com.br
6
Shared Services News | Edição 26
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