Nearshorejournal.com – 01.04.10
more in page 5
“ I was very surprised by the number of
Latin American multinationals that have
already moved into this journey ”
SSON Editor at large, Rakesh Sangani
looks back at the highlights and trends
that evolved in Shared Services &
Outsourcing in 2009 and looks ahead to
the state of play for 2010.
It might not yet have the same profile as
South Asia or Eastern Europe, but Latin
America is becoming an increasingly
popular destination for organizations
looking to establish shared service
centers, either serving domestic markets
or as part of regional or even global
shared services strategies. Furthermore,
along with this growth in the captive
sector Latin America has become the
focus of growing interest on the part of
major outsourcing providers whose entry
into the market has had knock-on
consequences across the board. Throw
into this already-volatile mix the current
economic instability and it‟s easy to see
why the region‟s activity is making waves
across and beyond the shared services
and outsourcing space in 2009.
-
Continental, the leading global rubber
and automotive products provider
signed a business process outsourcing
agreement for its Chinese operations
with CDP Group.
Steria, the European IT-enabled business
services company has secured the No. 1
position as the P2P business process
outsourcing supplier of Europe.
for $38 million, EXL acquire AmEx‟s travel captive for $30
million and many more acquisitions.
ssonetwork.com
January 3rd, 2010
The Year that was 2009
Before I start prophesizing about next year, it is worth
highlighted what changed in shared services and outsourcing
in 2009.
The biggest news was that Xerox have entered the
outsourcing market with their acquisition of ACS who were
going nowhere pretty quickly, Dell also acquired Perot
Systems to enhance their outsourcing capability whilst
Satyam (don‟t say it too loudly) were acquired by Tech
Mahindra.
Shared Services and outsourcing executives would have
noted a slowdown in activity through most of the year, with
the uncertainty of the economic environment, the
investment to kick off these projects were scrutinised more
than ever before. However, as the year progressed, we noted
an increase in activity with shared services and outsourcing
programmes more actively signed off as the investment
budgets were more readily approved.
We also recognised new outsourcing models being
implemented, new industries targeted, new clouds on our
horizon and new capabilities sought!
So what does this mean for 2010....
Consolidation of the industry
Gartner research suggested that 25% of the top outsourcing
providers will not operate as separate entities by the end of
2012 - it really annoys me when headline grabbing numbers
are plucked out of the air, and the reality is that there is very
little chance of such a dramatic change. In fact, I will run
through London at Christmas 2012 naked (not a pretty
sight!) if this turns out to be the case!
However there is likely to be some consolidation in the
industry. Of the leading players, I can see one of Accenture,
Genpact, Wipro, Infosys or Cap Gemini being acquired
within the next 18 months, with the most likely being
Genpact or Cap Gemini. There sizes and culture will tend
themselves to merger and acquisition talk.
The trend of buying capability and contracts will continue, in
2009 we saw Xerox acquire ACS for $6.4 billion, Cognizant
acquire UBS‟ back office for $75 million, Dell acquire Perot
Systems for $3.9 billion, Infosys acquire McCamish Systems
TCS' acquisition of Citibank and Infosys BPO acquisition of
Phillips in previous years, has set the tone for organisations
to acquire capability and win a contract at the same time
under a “sale and leaseback” type arrangement. Strategically,
the acquisition route is a great way for suppliers' growth
capability, stable revenue and referenceability in a short
timeframe.
In 2010, we will find that smaller outsourcing providers will
continue to acquire to grow their footprints and compete
with the larger players whilst the larger providers will acquire
strategically to win vital contracts and enter new markets!
Japan
The Japanese economy has been hit hard by the global
recession and given the pressures to cut costs, has become a
focus market for leading outsourcing providers. Notably,
Japanese clients have set up shared services or outsourced
locally or to China and Vietnam.
All of the leading outsourcing providers now have a presence
in China or Vietnam, with Wipro in Vietnam and China,
Accenture, IBM, Genpact and HP in the outsourcing
hotspot Dalian (China), and Infosys and TCS have over
10,000 people in other cities within China.
ITO and BPO executives within each of the leading firms
will confirm that a number of contracts from Japan are
expected this year. Infosys and TCS are already looking for
acquisitions in Japan to support the sales efforts in this
region and throughout the first six months of 2010 - do not
be surprised if a local Japanese shared service centre, or a
Japanese outsourcing provider is acquired by a leading
provider.
Expect also a number of $25 million plus contracts from the
Japanese market being tendered in 2010.
Healthcare
Dell Chief Executive, Michael Dell stated earlier this year,
“When you look at the healthcare space, it's the one sector of
the economy that has the least amount of IT, and we see it as
very promising for growth." Weeks later, Dell acquired Perot
Systems, who already have a strong presence in healthcare.
Dell also won a contract in July to provide IT Consulting
through the Hunan Province.
Following the ACS acquisition, Xerox CEO Ursula Burns
stated, “ACS is probably the world's leader in healthcare
business processing. They have the largest position in
www.institutodegestao.com.br
Medicaid processing". And in March 2009, Infosys CFO, V.
Balakrishnan said the company needed to scale up in the
healthcare market.
In the UK, Steria have set up a joint venture with the
Department of Health to provide Finance & Accounting,
and Payroll services, however the market is ripe for an HR
BPO provider to provide further services to NHS Trusts. In
the US, the market is larger and still competitive and
Continental Europe, Japan and China represent further
opportunities.
Outsourcing vendors are competing frantically to become
the vendor of choice for healthcare. However, in 2010
expect a number of vendors ranging in size and capability
winning healthcare contracts across the globe. This will be
due to the differing cultures and approaches taken by
healthcare providers both within countries and across
countries – some will be intimidated by the large blue chip or
Indian providers selecting instead a smaller more flexible
vendor to support its requirements.
What is clear, with the focus on cost reduction in a downturn
in the economy, is that the model of healthcare will change
in 2010 and more and more specialist providers will support
the non core areas of healthcare (finance, payroll, IT, HR
and so on).
Custom BPO
Whilst finance, HR and procurement offerings have become
increasingly commoditised offering lower and lower margins
to providers, clients have continued to view themselves as
unique from an industry and capability perspective, and
complain that providers do not understand their industry
and the culture embedded in their organisation.
This conundrum is driving BPO providers to the custom
BPO route, where service provision is linked to transactional
or higher value functions specific to an industry. The custom
BPO model is becoming increasingly popular in the
insurance, banking and utilities markets. In 2010 we expect
this trend to continue with specific industry offerings
becoming increasingly popular, in particular within media,
entertainment and publishing.
BPO Providers
So what is in store for the BPO providers in 2010?
In 2010, we will begin to hear practitioners say “no one was
ever fired for hiring Genpact, TCS, Infosys or Wipro”.
Onshore capability will become increasingly important in
winning BPO deals, and the providers that do not have that
capability will either build or acquire.
The successful BPO providers will be open to change and
setting up new models such as joint ventures and alliances
to enter new markets – a model that Infosys, TCS and
Genpact have already successfully deployed.
We will see that in the core BPO markets for finance, HR
and procurement the market share experienced by the
blue chip American providers will be significantly
challenged by the Indian providers that are developing
their credibility across these markets. It will be a
challenging year for IBM, HP, Cap Gemini and Accenture
who will all need to significantly change their ways of
working and levers for success if they are to continue with
the market share experienced in recent years.
ssonetwork.com
January, 2010
As part of the CDP HR series, SSON spoke with HR
Director of Continental, Klemens Schürger, about the
partnership between Continental and CDP Group.
SSON: Mr. Schürger, could you provide some
background on Continental’s global HR strategy?
Klemens Schürger: Yes, of course. Continental initiated
a large-scale HR transformation about three years ago.
Although we had been looking at optimizing HR services
for all our operations, the acquisition of VDO from
Siemens in September 2007 acted as a catalyst for change.
We suddenly had thousands more staff to service, and also
had to replace Siemens‟s HR technology. So an overhaul
of our own HR processes at the same time made sense.
SSON: How many locations and staff is this global
HR transformation impacting?
KS: It is a global initiative, and covers all our operations. I
am responsible for all our international locations.
Continental covers 130,000 staff in total. Of these, 25,000
are based in the Americas, 17,000 in Asia Pacific, 43,000
in Germany – and the balance in the rest of Europe.
SSON: Can you offer some specifics as to which
services you are evaluating?
KS: We are currently evaluating the transfer of the payroll
process, the personal master data administration process,
and the HR reporting process.
www.institutodegestao.com.br
We also have an employee self-service tool for performance
management, called HRD Online, which we are about to roll
out, as well as a recruiting tracking system. Essentially, we are
focusing on developing an interface between the recruiting
tracking system and an inhouse personnel data
administration system. This is part of our strategy and pretty
much defines the direction we are headed in.
applications or processes. In some cases we have worked
with a number of providers. Romania is one example, but
this has been a result of unusually rapid growth in this
market over the past 5-6 years, requiring us to ramp up
services delivery. We are currently in the process of
insourcing these particular services, however, as we are
now able to provide them ourselves.
SSON: How are you implementing HR services across
different regions? Does a global solution feature in your
longer-term plans?
SSON: Why did you decide to outsource some of the
HR function to CDP Group in China?
KS: At the moment we are taking a pragmatic, more regional
approach. In Germany we already have two shared services
centers in operation, one in the north and one in the south –
though we are considering how to merge these. Elsewhere,
we are planning to implement shared services in Romania,
the Czech Republic, and Hungary. These will probably take
the form of running on our own inhouse platforms of SAP
HR. Although we are currently running regional centers, a
global strategy is certainly a greater vision. As I mentioned
earlier, our HR transformation was given a push after
Continental‟s acquisition of VDO. It acted as a catalyst for
change. We are just moving carefully and in stages.
SSON: How do you evaluate your sourcing decisions what are your options?
KS: We look at HR services options as follows: inhouse
shared services based on our own SAP HR platform; a full
BPO; or a hybrid, where the inhouse shared services include
some applications outsourcing. We evaluate our sourcing
decisions on the basis of value-added returns -- meaning that
we would only consider changing the process if there was a
minimum rate of return to the organization -- we expect at
least a 25% savings rate.
As a reference guide, we work out a “base cost” by
conducting a Total Cost analysis of the current situation, and
then develop various service scenarios, calculating the impact
of each on headcount, IT costs, etc.
We approach any sourcing decision from two perspectives:
First, the cost perspective, i.e., aiming for a savings of 25%
or more, and second, by considering our long-term strategy.
So, even if a particular solution offers advantages from a cost
perspective, it still needs to align with our corporate strategy.
SSON: Do you work with many different outsource
providers in a given geography? Or would you prefer to
work with a single partner across different services?
KS: In theory, I believe it is more advantageous for us to
work with one vendor where possible, even for different
KS: We operate across 10 different entities in China. Our
payroll in the past was based on excel files. Obviously this
was not satisfactory moving forward, and our corporate
auditors were pushing us to develop an automated system.
We spoke to a number of possible providers for this
region – IBM, HP, ADP, etc. CDP stood out from the
rest. Not just in terms of offering the lowest cost, which
they did; but also in terms of the concept they offered and
their professionalism. On the cost side, CDP offered a
tool called EasyHRO – this clearly demonstrated planned
cost reductions well beyond our 25% hurdle rate.
Another factor that soon emerged with CDP is that they
are very reliable and operate quickly. In our early
discussions I remember them saying that they planned to
integrate our 10 locations within five months. I had my
doubts and thought to myself, “Let‟s see.” But in fact, that
is exactly what they did. I was impressed.
We signed a three-year contract with CDP in March 2008.
CDP now runs our full payroll operations, covering 6,500
people.
SSON: How do you coordinate the working groups?
Are there any hick-ups?
KS: On our side, we have an HR executive in China who
acts as project lead on our behalf. Together with the
project lead at CDP she coordinates the work. I have to
say – it is amazing how well this project runs. In all my
project work over the years, there have always been
complications or issues. This Chinese BPO project
implemented without any problems at all. CDP even preempted any change management issues by taking the
initiative with our local HR and plant managers, achieving
the stakeholder buy-in that was necessary to effect the
transition before we even needed to step in. There have
been no occasions where I felt I needed to review road
blocks. CDP‟s company culture is such that they pre-empt
issues before they arise. They are extremely responsive to
email and I can rely on them.
www.institutodegestao.com.br
SSON: If you were going to choose BPO for other
countries in Asia Pacific, would you be more likely to
diversify your providers or stick with fewer trusted
ones?
KS: Our experience to date has been very good, so if we
were looking at bringing other countries in the Asia Pacific
region in, we would certainly consider CDP. I would prefer a
strategy of consolidating suppliers. We are, in fact, about to
evaluate our options for the rest of Asia Pacific. Again,
depending on our strategic drivers this might go inhouse, to
full BPO or to a hybrid model. We are not yet decided.
actusnews.com
November 12th, 2009
Steria, the European IT-enabled business services company
has announced that for the second consecutive year, it has
secured the No. 1 position as the purchase-to-pay (P2P)
business process outsourcing (BPO) supplier of choice
across Europe. Steria‟s P2P (accounts payable) BPO ranking
was unveiled in the recently-published NelsonHall BPO
Market Assessment, 2009-2013. In the same report, Steria
rose to the No. 3 position in Europe for multi-process
finance and accounting (F&A) BPO, which covers accounts
payable, accounts receivable, general accounting, and
treasury and cash management, amongst other key services.
Steria was also ranked No. 1 in the UK for overall finance
and accounting BPO, according to NelsonHall‟s research.
According to NelsonHall, in 2008 Steria captured 6.4% of
the purchase-to-pay market in Europe, maintaining its No. 1
position. In multi-process F&A BPO, Steria gained a
position, moving from fourth in 2007 to third in 2008, with
7.3% market share in this category.
The NelsonHall BPO rankings follow Steria‟s recent
announcement that it has been awarded „Best BPO Project‟
by the British National Outsourcing Association (NOA) for
its landmark achievements as one-half of the joint venture
with the UK Department of Health, the NHS Shared
Business Services, established in 2005. Mike Wood, COO of
NHS Shared Business Services, will be delivering a keynote
presentation at the „Attaining F&A Shared Services Process
Excellence‟ conference, taking place next March in London.
For more details, please visit the conference website or
download the full brochure.
nearshorejournal.com
January 4th, 2010
It might not yet have the same profile as South Asia or
Eastern Europe, but Latin America is becoming an
increasingly popular destination for organizations looking
to establish shared service centers, either serving domestic
markets or as part of regional or even global shared
services strategies. Furthermore, along with this growth in
the captive sector Latin America has become the focus of
growing interest on the part of major outsourcing
providers whose entry into the market has had knock-on
consequences across the board.
Throw into this already-volatile mix the current economic
instability and it‟s easy to see why the region‟s activity is
making waves across and beyond the shared services and
outsourcing space in 2009. The Shared Services &
Outsourcing Network convened a panel representing
practitioners, providers and advisors to take a look at the
current level of maturity of the Latin American market
and to examine how - and if - the economic malaise
affecting much of the rest of the global economy is
impacting upon operations in the region. Attending were:
Laura Bao Castro CR FSSC Controller Intel Corporation,
Esteban Carril Director Latin America Finance
Operations EMC Corporation Mauro Mezzano Partner
Vantaz Group Consulting Ricardo Neves PwC Global
Sourcing
Leader
for
South
America
PricewaterhouseCoopers.
SSON: I think the first question we should look at is:
is it right to talk of “Latin American shared services”
at all? Latin America is a very big region
geographically and in terms of population; it’s got a
smaller linguistic diversity than, for example,
Europe, but there are still very big differences
between, say, Brazil and Costa Rica. To what extent
is it actually possible for organizations – captive or
BPO – to take a truly regional approach in Latin
America? Is it impossible to avoid having significant
resources in individual countries?
Ricardo Neves: This is a region different from other
regions in the world. If you talk about intra-region
services, you‟re talking about two major languages which
are, in some ways, close to each other; you have also a
close
www.institutodegestao.com.br
closeness of overall culture; and usually what you see with
multinational or regional operations here is that the larger
countries like Brazil, Argentina, Mexico, Chile correspond
to a significant size of the operations.
presence. Do you think it’s still the biggest
companies who are setting up shared services in
Latin America or are the smaller, or maybe midmarket, organizations also getting involved?
Usually if you look at most of the global or multinational
companies in the region, they have 50% or even 75% of
their operations carried out in two or three countries at
most - and then 10, 12 other countries where they do have
operations but which make up only 25% or less of their
business. This gives a challenge when setting up a regional
center, because there is a scale for the larger countries
which is not present in the smaller ones – and what I‟ve
seen here is a mix between totally centrally run shared
services and a lesser local presence in smaller countries to
make sure the right scale is achieved and the right support
is done at the regional level.
Laura Bao Castro: I think the mid-market is coming up.
I was able to go to [SSON‟s Shared Services America
Latina 2008 event in] Chile last year, and also participated
in the SSON conference in Mexico City, and I was very
surprised by the number of Latin American multinationals
that have already moved into this journey, or are in the
process of doing so – especially in Mexico where I think a
lot of companies are looking into it, even having shared
services within Mexico itself. The concept is right there;
they know they can reduce costs and produce more quality
with shared services, and even within Mexico itself
companies are developing shared service centers.
There are companies based in Brazil that I‟ve seen who
have regional shared services – like the brewer AmBev,
now connected with InBev and AnhauserBusch, which has
a very large regional shared services based in Sao Paulo
serving not just operations in the region, but also the
firm‟s operations in Canada for the Labatt operations.
Unilever has also set up an HR shared services - and has
just sold its finance shared services to Capgemini in the
region. In sum, from those large operations that I‟ve seen,
as I said I‟ve seen a mix of some centralised services and
some small countries with local services combined.
Esteban Carril: We‟re serving Argentina, Chile, Peru,
Mexico, Colombia, Venezuela, and Brazil. My team is
divided into three functional areas, in two countries. One
team is working in Sao Paulo, Brazil; the other two
functional teams are working here in Argentina. We run
accounts payable, accounts receivable, credit and
collections, billing, cash applications, payroll, commissions
and bonuses. It‟s actually not divided linguistically: we
found we already had some good skills in Brazil to develop
the credit and collections department there, so we decided
to leave the existing group providing services there in
Brazil, to provide services for the rest of the Latin
American countries. We wanted to have three functional
groups, but we wanted to try to keep the same skilled
people working and we didn‟t want to have to move them
from one country to another.
Laura Bao Castro: We‟re part of a global strategy. We
have currently two pretty large financial shared services
centers in Intel. One is located in Malaysia and the other
one is located here in Costa Rica; the markets that are
supported from Costa Rica are Canada, the US, Costa
Rica, and Mexico, Colombia, Venezuela, Chile, Argentina
and Brazil.
SSON: Laura and Esteban, you both come from big
global organizations with significant worldwide
share
Mauro Mezzano: Actually we‟ve been seeing this shift
since two or three years ago. At the start of the decade
many multinationals began establishing shared services in
the region, but when I went to conferences in Miami and
Orlando there weren‟t many Latin American-owned
companies present. Then in 2004, 2005, bigger local
companies and groups started with the concept. Now
smaller and smaller companies are doing it; some of them
don‟t really implement what we would call shared services
but they do centralize and they do take a few concepts
from shared service centers, and perhaps redesign a
process. The influence of shared services is spreading out
through many more companies than before.
Ricardo Neves: I‟ve seen an increase in interest: among
mid-market companies it‟s less regional. What I‟ve seen is
among large companies, they‟ve done a lot of
rationalization in each of their countries of operation, and
a lot of discussion about regional shared services. What
I‟ve seen in the mid-market, specifically in Brazil, are still
questions on “in-country” shared services if you know
what I mean. It‟s more making sure that they leverage
their local operations, and then as a second step –
especially with some of the systems work done – it‟s
something of a done deal to set up something regional:
when you have a regional systems platform, for example.
SSON: Let’s shift focus slightly and take a look at the
outsourcing market in Latin America. Over the past
couple of years we’ve seen the entry into the region of
some of the big global players – in particular some of
the big Indian providers. What impact has that had
on the market – and on firms that are running shared
services?
Esteban Carril: In my experience in leading a shared
service centre I have been trying to find different ways to
www.institutodegestao.com.br
do things, and finding vendors who can provide services in
a more efficient and economical way than us doing it
ourselves. When it comes to the outsourcing sector, I find
that in Latin America things are still in development.
When it comes to outsourcing it‟s important to see how
well-organized companies are, and how well they provide
services in multiple countries – and I see the challenge for
many of the big firms is that they are still working as
independent companies in each country, and not really
regionally organized in order to provide services to multicountry shared service centers. I think that‟s one of the key
points that I‟ve been finding. Another key point is that
some companies are regionalized but unfortunately they
might not have presence in all markets, so that becomes a
problem in terms of finding a single regional outsourcing
solution to meet our needs.
Laura Bao Castro: About five years ago companies
providing outsource service arrived to Costa Rica. Since
then, these companies have grown , for example HP has
now close to 8,000 employees. While I can‟t be specific
about their services or regions they serve, these companies
look for people speaking Spanish, English, Portuguese,
French, Italian – even Chinese. We do not work
specifically with an outsource vendor at this moment – but
periodically we reassess our current strategy.
Ricardo Neves: One of the features that I‟ve noticed, one
of the movements in the outsourcing space in Latin
America, is that there‟s been a lot of currency fluctuation
between the dollar and the real, and the dollar and other
currencies, and I‟ve seen some discussions on contract
review - especially for service providers – from both sides:
if the clients want to take advantage of that, or even
discuss relocation of some work; or if the providers are
saying that an increasing cost is related to currency
fluctuation putting added pressure on their margins.
Definitely currency fluctuations have been one of the
biggest topics of discussion in the region.
SSON: OK, let’s move on and address the big issue of
the moment and, perhaps, of many moments to
come: the financial crisis and global economic
downturn, and their impact upon shared services and
the sourcing sector in the region. Ricardo, what do
you see as having been the main changes in the space
since the beginning of the main phase of the crisis in
October?
Ricardo Neves: What I‟ve seen is basically a larger
interest in discussing measures to reduce costs. Some of
the plans that were lined up to be rolled out in the future
have now become more interesting for discussion now;
specifically, if they can help reduce costs. The mood, the
willingness to do something now has increased.
Organizations today want to do something bolder than
they were willing to do even six months ago. We used to
hear things from the business like “don‟t disrupt my
growth”, “don‟t rock the boat”; now executives are
coming and saying “hey, where can we make this boat
more nimble? How can we rock the boat but at the same
time make us leaner and more prepared?” I‟ve seen this
happening in a couple of ways. One is, clients coming to
us looking for an overall assessment of cost reduction –
which usually includes the theme of shared services.
Secondly, we‟re also having a lot of discussions on
reviewing outsourcing contracts – or even making those
contracts broader, in order to ensure they are capturing all
the value they could based on the relationship. So overall
what I‟m seeing is an increased willingness to take bold
measures to ensure cost reduction.
SSON: Do firms still have money to spend on big
implementations, or is it about making changes as
cheap as possible?
Ricardo Neves: I think a lot of it is, as you say, to make
things as cheap as possible, as fast as possible. But I‟ve
seen some room to say “if I need to spend that to get that
back, then let me hear what you have to say”. Again, I
think firms are more willing to do things than they were
before - but no-one‟s saying they‟ve got a big pile of
money to reduce their costs. What they need to do is
support the investment through the cost reduction itself.
SSON: Moving over to the practitioners: Laura and
Esteban, how have you been responding to the crisis?
Has it had a big impact on your business and are you
looking at operations in a different way?
Laura Bao Castro: Intel Corporation has been, over the
past 2. 5 years, on a restructuring and efficiency program
that has resulted in run-rate savings of greater than three
billion dollars, CapEx avoidance in excess of one billion
dollars, and a reduction of twenty thousand employees
from our peak in 2006. We as part of the Corporation are
taking actions to contribute in this process. We are doing a
big effort to reduce discretionary spending and one
example is travel. We are also increasing the number of
meetings over the phone and are focusing on productivity
and efficiencies so we can do more with the same.
Esteban Carril: Laura mentions the travel and
entertainment reduction, and this is clearly an area where
we have tried to pay close attention – but as a matter of
fact I think that there is no doubt that the economic crisis
will bring new opportunities for shared services here in
Latin America. I think this might now be a great time to
demonstrate that Latin America is a reliable region,
especially for global shared services. As we speak my
company is looking for new opportunities in emerging
markets. Right now we are looking for a shared service
www.institutodegestao.com.br
center for sales operations here in Latin America; this
might be a great opportunity for consolidation and cost
efficiency. Like Laura we have accelerated process
improvements and efficiencies, and tightened our controls
over expenses; we are also now implementing new tools to
give us better visibility of customer usage patterns and
people‟s performance, in order to drive customers to more
efficient services. Those services that may be high-cost and
are not being used by our customers are the ones that we
would like to either outsource or discontinue. We have
also identified other opportunities to expand our scope of
services by leveraging our shared services to serve new
internal customers, and redirecting our services to areas
where they can add more value… [Regarding discretionary
spending] As Laura mentioned, we have to do more with
the same; in my case I‟m trying to engage people from my
shared services to lead some of these projects. On other
cases we will prioritize those projects where we see there is
a clear benefit in costs in the short term.
Mauro Mezzano: What I would say is, working in shared
services implementations in 2000, 2001, everybody was
looking towards cost reductions. Then moving through
2005, 2006, 2007 and last year – up to October, of course!
– I had, as a consultant, many customers who were very
focused on growing, so they were very interested in
preparing for big growth rates. Now, after October last
year, once again I‟m getting many calls from people
looking for cost reductions, and being very proactive in
implementing projects with quick results. I think it‟s come
back to that, and I think as Esteban was saying, in our
region some countries become even more interesting for
multinationals to do medium-to-long-term cost reductions
because the labor costs are under what they can see in
other regions. Something which is different from the 2000
period, in 2008, 2009, 2010, I think the offshoring/BPO
providers are really appearing here in Latin America, and
this could be a very interesting moment to potentiate that
outsourcing and offshoring business.
SSON: Have you been seeing clients are coming to
you with the need to do more with the same amount
of money, or reduced budgets?
Mauro Mezzano: I‟ve been seeing both. Some of the
clients that were working here during 2008 in shared
services have come to me and said “Sorry, I cannot come
anymore with this budget because my company is in a
crisis”; but at the same time I‟ve been having new calls
from customers who weren‟t working with us previously,
but who really want to work with us because they‟ve got a
new approach to shared services. The market is still very
open and diverse, but I think it‟s going to narrow down
into cost reductions during March and onwards.
SSON: Obviously globally over the last few years one
very big question has been how to attract and retain
talent. Recently however as the economy has
worsened there has been the feeling in other parts of
the world that talent acquisition and retention isn’t
going to be such an issue over the foreseeable future,
because people aren’t going to be willing to move out
of secure jobs. Is this mirrored in what’s happening
in Latin America right now?
Laura Bao Castro: You know, Costa Rica is behaving
very differently from other markets, specifically in the
service industry. This year is no different; and the
projection is 3,500 new jobs, so we actually have a pretty
hot market. Talent retention is critical for our success. In
terms of our sourcing strategy, we work very closely with
the technical schools – particularly the accounting
technical schools – and the public university that provides
accounting professionals. We provide internship programs
for technical school graduates and a student program for
university students: we bring those people while they‟re
still studying to work part-time for us – some of them in
an internship mode, some as what we call “student
workers” – and by the time they graduate, and if we feel
that they have delivered to our expectations – we offer
them full-time jobs. That has been a very successful
strategy that we implemented about six years ago, and we
have a conversion rate of 95%. In addition we provide
English classes to those employees to ensure that by the
time they get converted they have reached the level of
English that we require to do our jobs, because we offer
services to the North American market and a lot of our
jobs will require a certain level of English capability. So
that‟s a sourcing strategy that I think has proven to be
very successful for us, and it gives a continuous pipeline of
new employees coming in. In the area of talent retention,
Intel is a company that believes in flexibility and we do
provide a lot of flexibility to our employees. I don‟t know
if you‟re familiar with the term “Generation Y” for people
born after 1980; 80% of the population that I manage are
Generation Y, young people with very different
mentalities – they have a different chip in their minds
from mine, for example – and they value flexibility very
much, so we have programs like what we call
“telecommuting” where they‟re able to work from home
up to two days a week. They have different start and
ending times – some of these employee are going to
school so they need flexibility to continue their studies –
we have found through the surveys and questionnaires
that flexibility is one of the main reasons why they choose
to stay with us. We provide portable computers to all our
employees which they can take home – and this
generation are technology-growers, of course, so they love
that. These two things have really been proven to help us
retain employees – in addition to the career development
of course. One of the beauties of shared services is that
you manage different functions, you manage different
groups, and if someone wants to start a career they will
www.institutodegestao.com.br
have the opportunity to move into these different groups
and become a rounded professional.
SSON: Esteban, how are you finding the employment
market – and has there been a shift in your
acquisition and retention strategies as a result of the
economic crisis?
Esteban Carril: In our case – and I would say that this
applies for every other shared services in Latin America –
turnover rate is one of the most challenging areas for
shared services. We have been doing several things to
retain our talent. We have been cross training – so, for
example, when an employee comes to work in one
department we offer them some exposure to other areas
of operations, to other processes, so they can learn other
activities and processes which as Laura pointed out adds
more value to their own career. This year we are also
offering a new service inside shared services which is that
we loan employees to other areas, so for example if a
business area needs an extra person because someone goes
on maternity leave, or even leaves the company, we
provide them with people as a service. If our people are
trained in other systems and other processes we can add
value by moving those people to other areas where they
can spend two or three months. We‟re offering that as
another service from our shared service centre. Another
area is flexible time. The nature of our business is, 70% of
our business takes place within the last three weeks of the
quarter so we really need to be flexible with our people.
We let them do some telecommuting, we offer flexible
time, because – as Laura pointed out – you should give
them some kind of freedom inside the company. We
provide English and Portuguese classes as well. The key
here is that we‟ve signed some agreements with universities
through which we bring new people on board; we usually
train them in those areas which are more transactional, so
they gain experience – and then we move them around,
not only inside shared services but also outside, offering
them now career opportunities in the business, in different
countries, in our local finance team. So we offer them
several routes to success inside our company.
SSON: Are you thinking that turnover is still going to
be an issue for you in a worsening economy and a
consequently tightening job market?
Esteban Carril: I think right now, there are several
companies that are letting people go, and I think the labor
market will be better for us. However, inflation is still a
problem – particularly in Argentina – so when it comes to
retention we would expect to be reactive in terms of salary
adjustments, to ensure competitive salaries. So in general
terms I think the market‟s going to be quieter; however,
we should always keep an eye on the need for salary
adjustments – especially with the inflation fluctuations we
may see in coming years.
SSON: Ricardo, what’s your take on the job market
and the pressures on talent management at the
moment? Have things changed as a result of
October’s events?
Ricardo Neves: Some of the clients I support have said
the pressure on them has increased to deliver a good
service at a lower cost, and the best way to do that is with
good people. So I think the search for good people, and
the importance of retaining them, and working the talent
market, is still a big challenge as we go into crisis mode.
Even though when you think about it there might be a
little more availability of resources on the market, when
you look at the example we‟ve heard of Costa Rica – or
even Brazil, where companies are going more into the
interior of the country and looking at other cities inside
Brazil to be able to retain a good flow of people coming
out of universities, and have been growing very fast
throughout the country – shared services and new
organizations coming in are going after talent very fast,
wherever it is; so I don‟t believe it will be an easier time
managing talent for shared services during the crisis we
have now.
SSON: And have you noticed – or are you forecasting
– a drop in attrition rates over the next few months?
Ricardo Neves: Not at this point; considering what I‟ve
both from clients and from providers with whom I‟ve
been working closely I have not seen any significant
change in those rates at this point, in Brazil particularly.
SSON: And will the increased operation of big BPO
providers have an impact here?
Ricardo Neves: I think so. I have not seen a slowdown
in any way in the growth of the shared service centers
either from providers or companies going after it. So even
if there is any increase in supply I don‟t think demand will
decrease; actually, I think demand will increase from both
existing shared services and from new companies coming
into the market. I don‟t foresee an easier time on turnover
rates or talent retention.
Editores
Rodrigo Lang | Vanessa Saavedra
Conselho Editorial
Caio Fiuza
Eduardo Saggioro
Vitor Marques
Contato: pesquisas@visagio.com.br
www.institutodegestao.com.br
Shared Services News | Edição 08
Posts relacionados
Até 2017, previsão é que pelo menos 73% dos Centros passem
Pressão pela produtividade tem levado diretores e gestores de CSCs a
Atividades de TI como atendimento ao usuário, operação de sistemas e