ssonetwork.com – Feb. 2010
By: Jim Whitworth, Director, HWML
Jim Whitworth, Independent Shared Services
Specialist looks at how one size does not fit all
and how moving to shared services needs 4Ps
Page 2
Avoiding the pitfalls of multilocational
geographical expansion: cultural, legal,
employee
motivation,
cost
and
governance.
How a strategic approach to managing
temporary professional engagements is
being brought under the shared services
umbrella.
Much debate has taken place over the
years with some strong opinions that a
Shared Service Center needs to be in a
Greenfield location, picked for its
specific suitability and sufficiently
detached from the locations of the old,
distributed business structure to shake
off any historic organisational baggage.
A Greenfield site can be chosen with
stakeholder consensus based on the best
advice and detailed review of suitability.
Individual premises can be newly built or
refurbished to provide an ideal working
environment for the planned SSC
operation.
As part of the HR series, SSON
considers why it makes sense to bring
some HR services back inhouse.
By: Jim Whitworth, Director, HWML
February, 2010
Part I of this article looked at how 'Program' and 'Process'
were important when looking at a low cost route to shared
services. In Part II, we look at 'Premises' and 'People'.
Premises
Much debate has taken place over the years with some
strong opinions that a Shared Service Center needs to be in a
Greenfield location, picked for its specific suitability and
sufficiently detached from the locations of the old,
distributed business structure to shake off any historic
organisational baggage. A Greenfield site can be chosen with
stakeholder consensus based on the best advice and detailed
review of suitability. Individual premises can be newly built
or refurbished to provide an ideal working environment for
the planned SSC operation. But, acquiring, fitting-out and
managing a new facility can be a hugely expensive
endeavour. A Brownfield site (in this context an existing
facility able or adaptable to accommodate the required
number of office staff) perhaps doesn‘t send the same
messages around the organisation that the SSC brings great
change for the better nor does it necessarily help establish
the concept of a separate operation providing improved
administrative service to its internal ―clients‖ (especially if the
Brownfield site happens to be the existing regional HQ) but
the set-up cost comparison with a totally new facility in a
previously untried location could be overwhelmingly
compelling.
As we emerge from the worst of recession, many multi-site
businesses will have more floor space than they currently
need, more than they can anticipate using in at least the
medium term and probably more than they can hope to sell,
re-let or extricate themselves from in any way that doesn‘t
carry a high price-tag. Locating an SSC in current excess
space may not only resolve a Real Estate issue but will do so
with a positive impact on business costs beyond simply
effective utilisation of space.
The actual process of selecting a Brownfield site will differ
slightly from that of finding a Greenfield location. For the
latter, emphasis is usually initially on geographical location,
often starting with a blank sheet of paper, whereas the
option of using an existing facility may be limited to little if
any choice. However, the key selection principal is
fundamentally similar in that the need is for somewhere
where it is relatively straightforward and cost effective to hire
(and fire), employ and manage staff who are capable and
motivated to perform the intended tasks to a high standard.
This is the essence of an effective Shared Services
organisation.
The biggest challenge in choosing an existing facility may be
to focus the decision makers on the Shared Service
Centerrequirement rather than the short term gain from
solving a property problem. Strong sponsorship of the
benefits sought from Shared Services will be put to the test
over this issue. Unfortunately, excess office space is logically
more likely to be a problem in areas that don‘t have much
going for them in terms of growth, demand and motivated
workforce so this part of the SSC program requirement is
likely to need the most flexibility, probably the most
compromise and possibly some difficult decisions.
If there is no real choice of Brownfield site or choice is
limited to locations that are clearly unsuitable for an SSC,
this may be an item where cost cannot be contained at its
lowest possible level and an investment in a new facility may
be the only answer. For example, an existing facility that
needs major refurbishment but is located in a country where
suitable staff are scarce and employment legislation heavily
disadvantages the employer may be ultimately more
detrimental and costly than reverting to a Greenfield location
choice. If, however, there are some potentially good existing
locations the question is simple – are the right staff readily
available at the right cost and is the employment
environment favourable? A simple comparison of each
potential location based on a few key elements of these
criteria should enable the choice. Co-location with a regional
HQ or similar operation may give some impression of heavy
handed control rather than an internal service oriented
culture but it can be very convenient and reduce the amount
of additional business travel (enabling visits to the HQ and
SSC to be combined). It is also likely that an HQ function
has been located in or near a regionally important city,
providing the immediate availability of a sizeable multicultural, multi-lingual skilled workforce.
In terms of cost saving, a good existing facility may already
be suitably fitted out with finished floors, walls and ceilings,
light, power and communications connections available to
desk spaces. The building itself probably already has
connected services, communications and heating/air
conditioning. Depending on previous use, there may even be
sufficient or a good initial quantity of demountable
partitioning, desks and chairs to set up the SSC. Where part
of a large existing facility is available, catering, cleaning,
maintenance and other support infrastructure may already be
in place, operational and able to meet the increased demand.
The cost of undertaking and providing all of this from
scratch would otherwise be a major component of the
overall set up and could add several months to the schedule.
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People
In managing the reduction of the existing workforce,
distributed across business units, the key elements are the
proportion of staff that leave and the cost of their departure.
Obviously, local employment legislation is a significant factor
in the cost of the reduction and every precaution needs to be
taken to avoid the additional costs of litigation or protracted
disputes with unions or other representative bodies.
Engaging HR and legal specialists at a local level is almost a
prerequisite for this part of the programme.
Establishing the extent of the scope of the Shared Service
operation is fundamental in determining how many existing
employees are no longer required and at what level. If the
SSC scope is confined to very basic transaction processing
and/or leaves parts of tasks in the local business units, it may
be difficult to reduce local staffing costs, particularly at
higher operational and management levels. Whilst this may
keep down initial costs of terminations and redundancies, it
will not free up sufficient salary savings to enable the
realisation of a good ongoing cost benefit from the SSC. It is
essential to have sufficient SSC scope to allow the benefit of
reduced management in local units. A basic principle of
Shared Services is to create a single, relatively flat
management structure for a sizeable group of staff in one
location as a change from having multiple layers of
management duplicated across several business units.
Leaving the same managers in place locally but adding an
SSC management structure centrally contradicts that
principle and will almost certainly result in poor, if any
savings.
Having established a potential local workforce reduction that
will give sufficient opportunity for ongoing salary cost
savings in the SSC, it is possible to look for cost savings in
the process of that reduction. As above, any redundancy
payments will need to be in line with local legislation and
also, in most countries, with precedents set in any previous
reductions in workforce. So, any saving in this area needs to
come from reducing the number of redundancies whilst still
achieving the reduction in workforce. If there is already a
suitably skilled workforce in the chosen existing location to
start populating the SSC, any transfers of that group from
business unit to SSC will save redundancy costs. There is a
very limited potential to transfer staff from other business
units but the traditionally low take up of relocation
opportunities (particularly moving country) and the
difficulties of doing so without high relocation costs and
transferring inflated salaries, suggests that the best result may
be as low as 1% or 2% of the workforce.
Probably the most underused cost saving option is to look at
internal transfer of staff from redundant roles into open
positions elsewhere in the local organisation. It is essential
that such
that such transfers are to genuinely open roles that would
otherwise be filled through external recruitment. In
companies that have managed to shrink in order to
survive recession, a return to relative prosperity may leave
a number of holes in the organisation and there could be
some very good, experienced people available to fill those
gaps. With all the right factors adding together, avoiding
redundancies substantially or totally could even be
possible.
The second largest cost item in program budgets relating
to existing employees may be an amount allocated for
―retention‖. A substantial six or even seven figure sum
may be the anticipated total for distribution across existing
employees in return for them staying with the company
for a given period.
As soon as a Shared Services program is announced or
word spreads of its likelihood, there will be an increase in
the job search activities of current employees. Almost
regardless of the value of any retention incentive, good
employees without good accrued redundancy benefits
through length of service will actively look for alternative
employment and probably leave at the first opportunity.
This creates an unavoidable need for temporary staffing
anyway and, where a retention scheme is in place, leaves
payment going to the people who may have been lower
priority to keep for the duration. So, the easiest way to
save in this area is to simply avoid starting any retention
scheme. Some people will leave earlier than would be
preferred but that is part of the challenge of a Shared
Services program.
Finally, the key to meeting operational performance and
cost requirements in the Shared Service Center is in the
recruitment of the SSC staff. Wherever in the world the
SSC is to be based, it should be possible to reduce the
overall wage cost of performing the tasks allocated to it in
comparison with the previously distributed organisation.
Unfortunately, it‘s also fairly easy to let that slip through
missing too many opportunities during the recruitment
cycle - a clear and well followed plan is critical to success.
The wage cost savings should come from:
•
A significant overall reduction in the number of
employees needed to complete the tasks –through
streamlined processes, well managed workload and
productivity/performance management. The two
biggest risks to achieving this are while everybody
is getting used to the new operation and a need to
clean up some incorrect or incomplete work
migrated from the local units. When the staff
numbers need to exceed medium to long term
plans, it is better to employ temporary staff and
asing
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•
review regularly with a view to reducing rather than
increasing the permanent contingent in the hope that
natural attrition will resolve the issue – it won‘t!
•
A reduction in the number of managers overseeing
each task and a productive hands-on role for most, if
not all, managers. The reduction in cost can be
significant if the number of managers is cut
effectively in the local units. For example a
transaction processing operation in 20 business units
may have needed 20 managers. An SSC group
undertaking the same tasks may need only 1 or 2.
•
•
•
A different skill level across most employees – SSC
staff will work following a pre-determined process
whereas many staff in local business units will have
adopted their own methods of working based on
their level of skills and experience. Similar to the
overall reduction in employee numbers, the
reduction in required skills and experience can be
initially difficult to achieve. Many new SSCs tend to
recruit above the necessary skill level and often with
language skills and qualifications that are not needed
after a while, then struggle to motivate that
overqualified staff.
Salary levels payable when recruiting for the short to
medium term. In many areas of an organisation,
recruiters look for staff who could become long
service employees. Staffing an SSC at an ongoing
economic cost requires a continuous turnover of
employees to prevent a build up of individual pay
reviews distorting the cost of execution of a task.
The potential monotony of performing a repetitive
process will also generate an amount of staff
turnover, which may be viewed positively in terms of
creating a regular influx of freshly motivated and
enthusiastic new recruits. In consequence, starting
salaries may be set to meet the requirements of
people early in their careers, maybe needing the
experience and possibly only intending to be based
in the location for, say, 1 – 3 years.
A single managed pay structure that, as a major cost
item of the service provided to the business units, is
under continuous scrutiny from SSC management,
executive management and business leaders across
the company.
Although a Greenfield site in a low cost area may provide
additional salary cost savings, the successful delivery of the
above at a Brownfield site may compare favourably when the
difficulties of recruitment, local practice, etc., in an
unfamiliar location are taken into account.
By: Tim Palmer & Huw Watkins, PA Consulting
March, 2010
"Pity the organization that gets the recognition of
key religious events/holidays wrong or makes all
company communications have a parentcountry
slant, humor or style... "
You‘ve established stable operations in your HQ country
and demonstrated that you can be trusted; now company
leadership has challenged you to extend your service
multinationally. It‘s a familiar story, which can lead to
unfamiliar territory. Organizations that have expanded
service delivery outside their core locations have learned
hard lessons about the people and HR challenges that can
ensue. In hindsight, some of these lessons may seem
obvious, but in the excitement of delivering a project, it is
easy to be shortsighted.
The logic for expanding shared services multinationally is
clear and has been well documented in Shared Services
News. However, organizations considering establishing
shared multinational operations need to tread carefully.
People and HR programs that work well in home
countries may well be alien overseas. Multinational
organizations that we have spoken to experience
unforeseen people and HR challenges in five key areas:
cultural, legal, employee motivation, cost models and
governance.
Cultural Context
Cultural differences between local and HQ countries are
perhaps the mostpronounced, and yet most
underestimated, challenges that multinational shared
services organizations face: In Europe, there is a range of
decision-making styles. While the British, Irish and
Finnish approach will be familiar to American business
leaders, approaches with an increased focus on consensusbuilding and extended consultation timescales, such as
those used in Sweden and Germany, will be new
experiences.
Employees in both service center locations and served
countries will expect different treatment and
communication levels from their organization. For
example, Indians typically like to receive instruction —
consultation
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consultation may be perceived as a sign of management
weakness; whereas Western Europeans want to be
engaged in a discussion about the best way forward, and
would likely reject anything imposed upon them.
The approach to business etiquette can be different, too.
For example, in the Middle East a handshake indicates
that the process of negotiation has begun, as opposed to
the widely held Western belief indicating that the deal is
complete.
Language differences are an obvious challenge, and can
result in emotive reactions when handled incorrectly. One
Belgian organization was shocked to find out that their
service center worked only in Dutch (Belgians also speak
French and German), as was a Swiss client, whose
recruitment service was not delivered in the Swiss version
of German.
Shared services leaders would do well to take the time to
understand these issues and engage with their local
colleagues. They should also research the people that they
are working with, for example by reading the work of
Geert Hofstede, first published in the 1970s, which
identified cultural norms across more than 70 countries.
And for anyone dealing with the English, we often give
our non-British clients Kate Fox‘s book, Watching the
English — an anthropologist‘s view of how the English
behave!
For example:
Local interpretations of the Acquired Rights Directive will
dictate what is done when transferring services through
outsourcing. It governs employee rights to things such as
continued employment, continuity of service, continuity of
compensation and benefits and the right to consultation.
But because each country has a different set of rules, it can
be a minefield for any multinational organization to
navigate.
Local interpretations of the Working Time Directive
dictate how many hours people can and will work, along
with mandatory rest breaks: in France it is 35, in others it
is up to 48 hours per week.
Notice periods and severance payments vary by country–
in Germany, notice periods for long employment can be
statutory and up to seven months. Many European
countries require organizations that are making people
redundant to prepare a social plan, setting out the steps
that they are taking to reduce the social impact of the
change. This can include taking measures to preserve the
employment of the more long-serving (and often more
expensive) employees.
Key to making this work is to understand the intent
behind the legislation, work with that intent and plan well
ahead of any change with a realistic timetable. If the
legislative environment is understood at the start, it can
help to make the changes more sustainable.
Legal Challenges
Employee Motivation Framework
Legal challenges are among the most predictable for an
organization to face whensetting up globally. Yet, even
though it is well known that each country will have its own
legal framework, too many organizations fail to prepare
adequately.
US-based executives need to learn the hoops they have to
jump through in order to get things done in Europe. The
legal requirements for country-level and Europeanlevel
consultation have to be understood and factored in before
embarking on a program. For instance: all major business
changes that result in employee severance, site closure or
outsourcing need to be managed through a consultation
process with an elected works council.
To complicate matters, European legislation is
inconsistently applied. A majority of European
employment law is based on European Union (EU)
Directives, but implemented through country-specific
legislation, case law and precedent, which gives rise to
some unexpected differences.
Employees are motivated in different ways. Companies
establishing multinational shared services centers should
review their motivation frameworks to create an approach
fit-for-the-purpose of managing their services center team.
This may result in changing some established practices:
Having more career levels or salary points than would
otherwise be usual, so that a relatively young and
ambitious workforce can achieve early promotions. It is
common in Indian service centers to be promoted within
the first nine months.
Providing free language training after work to service
center staff in Eastern European locations, even if it is not
related to their work. Becoming active in the local
community by supporting charities and events. This is
important for organizations with a limited employer brand
as a way to establish themselves as a preferred place to
work.
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And then there are the hygiene factors; making sure that
demotivators do not become the biggest story in town.
Pity the organization that gets the recognition of key
religious events/holidays wrong or makes all company
communications have a parent-country slant, humor or
style.
The motivation framework and hygiene factors for each
workforce will be different. They have a cultural and
legislative dimension, but also reflect the age, experience
and education level, aspirations and personal status of the
employees. Each service center leader should create a
tailored local workforce and motivation plan for their
team.
It is important to set up the right governance relationship
between an HQ and its distant services centers. One
organization established its India-based services center for
US customers as an extension of its US operation. Every
person in the Indian service center had a direct line
reporting relationship to someone in the US. Naturally,
the US ―supervisors‖ could not cope with the
requirements of the hiring process. The company learned
the hard way and changed its governance model to one
which, although captive and internal to the company,
operated like an outsourcing relationship. The Indian
leadership soon were managing directly, which allowed the
Indian operation to flourish and take on additional work
in a controlled manner.
Cost Models
Conclusion
Another surprise that organizations encounter is that the
standard costs assumed in business cases rarely
materialize: The salary uplift to take account of benefits
and social security costs varies from country to country,
making a full-compensation analysis important. For
example, Swedish people have much higher social security
costs than the Dutch.
All of the points outlined are pitfalls that others have
fallen into. They are relatively easy to recognize with
hindsight. However, there is an economic reality, too. If
your shared services operation caters for every cultural
and social eccentricity, then standardization and cost
savings will never be achieved. Key to resolving this is to
take the time at the start of the project to listen, plan and
discuss. Document the assumptions that you are making
and create a framework for accommodating people and
HR issues into the plan. A small amount invested at the
start to understand the perspective of others will pay
dividends later.
There is also a need to understand the impact of skills on
the cost of resources. In Eastern Europe, some expertise
carries a premium that can dramatically drive up cost rates
(by up to 100%), such as Dutch, Swedish, Finnish and
Norwegian language speakers. Specialist roles which
require professional qualifications, like tax managers, have
a relatively common cost across the EU, so expected
savings in Eastern Europe often do not materialize.
In setting up a multinational services center, there will also
be expatriation and relocation costs to incur. The average
cost of an expatriated employee is 300% of that in their
home location.
These differing costs reinforce the need to analyze fully
the total cost of the solution and be realistic about the
total benefits that will be achieved.
Governance Framework
Finally, you cannot assume that someone who has
successfully managed a local shared services team will be
successful working multinationally. It takes a different
kind of relationship to manage, by conference call, a team
that you meet every six months, from managing one that
you see every day by walking the floor. Leaders that do
not understand this can either fail to raise their game, or
burn themselves out on airplanes.
By: Jamie Liddell, Contributing Editor, Shared
Services & Outsourcing Network (SSON), Tim
Palmer & Huw Watkins, PA Consulting
March, 2010
One of the most profound changes to have taken place
over the last couple of decades in this ever-changing
business world has been the disintegration of what might
be termed the ―job for life‖ ethos: the idea that permanent
employment with one or, at least , no more than a small
number of companies over the course of one‘s career was
the most desirable of all professional options, and that
mutual loyalty between employer and employee was
something that could and should be a given (barring
drastically deteriorating circumstances on one side or the
other). This ethos - however genuinely embraced by
workforce
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workforce and employer alike - has over the course of
only a couple of generations largely given way to a new
paradigm in which the relationships between employer
and employee tend to be far more transient and based on
immeasurably more complex foundations.
Whatever the causes of this development - and they are
numerous indeed - its consequences have included a
drastic reassessment in what constitutes a workforce and
how closely connected that workforce is to the corporate
body. The global business environment has witnessed the
rise of a vast host of professionals whose ties to the
individual businesses which pay them might last for only a
few weeks or months but whose impact can go right to
the heart of those businesses‘ operations: call them
consultants, independent contractors, contingent labor or
anything else you like, but the advent of this set of
temporarily affiliated professionals has fundamentally
changed the business landscape.
This is particularly true in the shared services and
outsourcing space, of course, of which transformation which implies a temporary state of being - is such a key
element. The unique skills required to put a shared service
implementation, or a similar change program, into practice
might well be totally indispensable to an organization for a
comparatively short period, and then relatively useless
once the change in question has been made. It makes no
sense for an organization to employ on a permanent basis
the kind of specialists demanded by the parameters of the
change; similarly, for those specialists the attractions of a
short-term, high-value, challenging and interesting
contract might far outweigh the appeal of a permanent,
relatively undynamic position on a career ladder unable to
tick many personal professional development boxes.
The advantages to a company of maintaining a significant
quotient of contingent, rather than permanent, employees
where possible have been especially prominent during the
last few quarters following the sharp downturn affecting
much of the world‘s business activity, during which the
ability to scale operations down or up to match varying
demand (scalability also being, of course, one of the great
boons conferred by a well-functioning shared service
organization, especially one operating on a global scale
and able to cater simultaneously for very different
economic climates according to geography) has been in
some cases the difference between corporate success and
failure. The capability of a global shared services body to
cope simultaneously with, say, continued contraction in
Europe, stagnancy in North America and an increasingly
steep upturn in emerging Asia has been evident on many
multinationals‘ balance sheets in recent times and, while
it‘s probably going a bit far to say that shared services‘
scalability has been an engine of recovery globally, it‘s
certainly
certainly had a significant impact on many companies
which might have faced much longer and more profound
doldrums under their pre-SSO structures.
Both within and beyond shared services, an organization especially one of significant size and scope - might now
have engagement with dozens, hundreds or even
thousands of these freelance professionals, active within
all corners of the business in advisory or delivery
capacities. While the benefits of this revolution have been
immense, however, it has also resulted in a drastic increase
in complexity in terms of working practices, terms and
conditions, payroll and the employee relations
environment generally, as well as calling upon businesses
to have an immeasurably greater understanding both of
the specific skillsets required for any given activity, and
how to go about obtaining and retaining them. These
requirements have given rise to the development of a
strategic approach known as Contingent Workforce
Management (CWM; also sometimes known as
Contingent Labor Workforce Management, or CLWM).
CWM ―is the practice of orchestrating the contingent
labor supply chain to meet customer expectations with
regard to quality, efficiency, cost, and risk,‖ explains Jason
Ezratty, Managing Partner at Brightfield Strategies. ―CWM
programs serve horizontally across the entire enterprise.
Furthermore, CWM relies on the expertise and resource
commitments of several corporate stakeholders including
HR, Procurement, IT, Legal, Tax, Finance, and Security.
CWM is typically administered through a software
platform known generically as VMS, or Vendor
Management Systems.‖
The crux of the matter, implies Ezratty, is that contingent
labor has now become such a crucial element of so many
different parts of a business that it needs to be addressed
strategically in order to facilitate the kind of efficiencies
and corporate coherence which are today a sine qua non
of a successful organization. Allowing each individual
department or location in a multinational corporation to
manage its own contingent labor strategies and practices
poses the same kind of problems as maintaining individual
finance or HR organizations for each of those
departments or locations - solving which has of course
been a key aspect of the success of the shared services
model. And where better to place implementation and
oversight of a CWM strategy that within a shared service
organization which already occupies such an integral
position within the wider structure?
―Some companies are beginning to position their CWM
program into their shared services hierarchy (versus
Procurement or HR, specifically),‖ says Ezratty. ―The
logic and benefits of doing so are dependent upon many
internal
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internal factors, including culture, goals, skill types, and
scope of service. [Meanwhile] outsourcing can be
answered two ways: one, outsourced operations can be
sourced and managed within the context of CWM; and
two, one can outsource their CWM program operations to
an MSP, or Managed Services Provider.‖
The idea of running certain outsourced operations via a
CWM framework is an intriguing one - particularly for
companies in transition for which outsourcing might be a
temporary state before full divestiture of a unit or a
similarly radical transformation, or who have included as
part of their outsourcing architecture roles which fit into
the ―contingent‖ rather than ―permanent‖ category.
However, a more common association of outsourcing
with CWM is the outsourcing of the workforce
management itself, either in part or end-to-end. This
activity is often described as Contingent Workforce
Outsourcing (CWO).
―There are,‖ believes independent MSP/RPO specialist
Tracey Friend, ―three choices a company may make:
manage contingent labor and professional services on
their own; self-manage part of it and outsource the other
part; or completely outsource the management to a
Managed Services Provider. Depending upon the spend
under management and geographic reach, may also
determine how this program is delivered. Just like large IT
outsourcers, the MSP providers who manage contingent
labor will create scale in their delivery models. The
outsourcing of recruitment is tough because there is a
transactional layer and a BPO layer. There are specialized
companies that provide both; however due to cost
compression, [they] must do it efficiently. Hence the
outsourcers in this space that provide both Recruiting and
Staffing outsourcing must continue to look at more
operationally efficient models, and as corporations desire
for these services to be global, must build help desk,
customer service, supplier service models that can scale,
and be culturally sensitive to the global needs.‖
On the other hand, explains Friend, ―if a company does
not decide to outsource this function, they may roll
components of this function into a HR shared services
center. It may be as simple as a tier 1 helpdesk to provide
transactional help (i.e. ―change my password‖), or it can
be more advanced to handle contracts and onboarding.
This approach will vary, by company culture, size, goals
and overall objectives around how they manage both
recruitment and staffing.‖
While the theory behind CWM and CWO is perhaps
nothing radically new, the trend towards embracing CWM
at the heart of a company‘s strategizing is certainly
accelerating and practices are undoubtedly maturing at a
rapid
rapid pace (again, to a certain extent catalyzed by the
economic events of the last couple of years as well as
longer-term business trends). It is of course a trend with
great relevance for the SSON community - both for those
members who themselves are classed as ―contingent
labor‖, and those whose roles may come to encompass
oversight or operational management of CWM strategy
and delivery. Implemented and managed correctly it can
contribute towards the quest for process perfection and
operational efficiency which underpins the entire space,
while reducing risk on the part of the employer at the
same time as formalizing the employer/contingent
employee relationship according to corporate norms. It
will be interesting to watch over the next few years how
fully CWM is able to be brought under the shared services
umbrella, and how this development impacts on both the
shared services space and the ongoing move towards
maturity of both CWM and CWO.
By: Niamh Byrne, Online Editor, Shared
Services & Outsourcing Network (SSON)
March, 2010
Participants:
Edward Golitko, Sr Director HR, EMC
Robbi Wendel, IS Applications Manager, Nissan North
America
Jim Scully, President and Founder, Shared Services
Institute
SSON: Afteryears of HR outsourcing, some
companies are bringing certain HR services back inhouse. Why do you think there has been this change?
Jim, can I start by asking you?
Jim Scully: The Shared Services Institute just finished a
pretty comprehensive survey on HR shared services
practice, and this is one of the areas that we looked at. It
looks as though it is a counter balancing trend; there is
quite a bit of activity in both directions – both sides of the
field, to use an American football analogy. First of all, I
don‘t see companies moving these things in-house for
costs alone. There is some unfulfilled expectation
underlying it. Some of that comes from decisions made at
the very beginning of the decision to move to outsourcing
when companies compared their current state versus a
future
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future outsourced state. Organizations that built a
capability for in-house delivery are actually asking
themselves that same question and getting a different
answer now. Now that they‘ve implemented Shared
Services, they are comparing the outsourced environment
to the now future state of in-house, and they are deciding
that the right thing to do is to bring it back in.
Robbi Wendel: I concur with that statement. A lot of
that has to do with the technology, ease, security and
comfort that comes with that having that in-house – and
the knowledge and the benefits of having the data inhouse, too.
SSON: At Nissan, are there examples where you have
looked at outsourcing but you have decided to keep
it in house?
Robbie: When we looked at Enwisen, we were trying to
consolidate disparate HR operations and that‘s why we
wanted an in-house solution. We also needed to
consolidate all our HR systems at the same time, so going
to an outsourced model wouldn‗t have worked for us. The
Shared Service model for Nissan meant not only a system
for case management, but also for the knowledge center consolidating policies and procedures and allowing
employees for the first time to have that access and that
‗touch.‘ Outsourcing wasn‘t going to provide them with
that opportunity.
Edward Golitko: I think there are a number of reasons
[why companies are trending in-house]. Around three and
a half years ago, it was like a mandate: ‗we must outsource
a certain percentage of your operations‘ – it appeared to
be all the rage. Even if it didn‘t make sense, you had to do
it, because that is what everyone else was doing. But there
are a number of reasons why we are looking to bring it
back in-house:
• Presence in China and India and in lower-cost
offshore locations. We have a payroll service center with
ADP that we are running in India, so why do we want to
be paying for the administration and everything else in
another service center? Can‘t we bring it in-house and use
the same thing?
• Technology eases this transition. You can think
about it conceptually and actually convey it to your
management team. The cost of doing this internally is less
expensive, and once you have the model you get the
synergy between the different areas of finance and HR
where you can back each other up.
• Ownership and control. When you outsource to
someone
someone else, you are giving control to them. We pride
ourselves in running pretty good businesses, and having
ownership and control.
• Consistent Training
• Efficiency. We use Wipro and Infosys in some of our
other areas, and we are going through a whole HR change
as we set up regional centers: one in Ireland, a mini one in
the US for the Americas, and one in India.
In summary, we are finding that we can do Shared
Services in-house technology consolidation in HR, and
other areas such as finance are doing the same thing. It
gets down to effectiveness, efficiency and cost. There‘s a
little bit of momentum now. If you look three years ago, I
wouldn‘t think it would be put together this well.
SSON: Jim, can I ask your thoughts on that? What
elements do you think makes sense for a company to
keep
in-house
and
those
to
outsource?
Jim: In the survey I mentioned earlier, we asked our
respondents to tell us for each functional area within HR,
if it is entirely insourced, mostly insourced, mostly
outsourced or entirely outsourced. As you might guess,
the mix is across the board. If you find a group of people
that outsource it completely, you will find a group of
people that will insource it completely. However, there
seems to be three categories that these functions fall in,
and I think it is pretty instructive for how these decisions
are being made.
• One category – call it ―our way‖ – includes HR
functions that are close to the core value proposition of
HR: to attract, retain, reward and motivate employees.
These are the kinds of functions that companies are
saying, ‗we‘re going to do this our way – we‘re not just
going to take some other way of doing this, because it has
got some serious implications about whether we deliver
value.‘ They want it inside so they have control over
it. Or, if they do outsource it they want the vendor to do
it their way. Areas that in the survey tended to fall into this
category are staffing, recruiting, training, HRIS, and
employee relations
• Category two – which I‘ll call ―their way‖ – is the
opposite. It includes functions that are further away from
the core value position of HR and are more driven by
external standards or regulations. Things like, relocation,
workers‘ compensation, unemployment compensation,
and COBRA administration were more outsourced in the
survey. I call this the ―their way‖ category because the
way they are performed is defined more by factors and
trends outside the company.
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• The third category crosses all areas and I call it the
―better way‖ category. This is where the solution,
whatever it is today – insourced, co-sourced or outsourced
– is not really working to the company‘s satisfaction and
they‘re looking for a better way of doing it. A good
example of this would be the FMLA leave
administration. Whereas a lot of it is in-house today, the
survey shows a lot of interest in future outsourcing. This
makes sense, since FLMA is very time-consuming and not
working very well at many companies. So in summary,
there is interest in both outsourcing and insourcing and
our survey findings suggest that those decisions fall into
the three categories I just mentioned.
If you try to outsource things that you really want to do
your way, you have to realize that your vendor is going to
have one arm tied behind their back in terms of being able
to deliver value. It is difficult for an outsourcer to do
things on a client-specific basis and really do it better and
cheaper.
SSON: What technology and trends are encouraging
you to insource?
Jim: One of the major things is software-as-a-service
because if you think about it, the technology enabler has
been a big part of value proposition for outsourcing. A
great many of outsourcing decisions were made because
there was a need to implement enabling technology, and
companies looking at a buy vs. build proposition decided
to take advantage of what the vendor could offer. SaaS is
simply outsourcing that sliver of the whole delivery pie; it‘s
just taking the enabler piece and outsourcing that. An inhouse provider is taking advantage of the functional
capabilities as well as the economies of scale that an
outsourcer would provide, so that‘s definitely one trend.
The other is that you just have to look at the sheer volume
of shared services start-ups, particularly in the last three
years. Organizations are building internal capabilities, and
therefore insourcing becomes more feasible and attractive.
hundreds of thousands of dollars in some situations. The
ability to integrate mergers and acquisitions and enhance
the value of those is not typically stated in the business
case. Other examples include being the driver of
administrative best practices or being a driver of
enterprise-oriented information and services. Those are
things that come with the project‘s maturity. I was part of
a Shared Services organization that, when I departed, was
already ten years old, so I have this experience. These are
things that you don‘t see initially, but they do come to
pass.
Robbi: In the last few years, it has definitely been
rewarding for us. We expanded initially from the US to
Canada. And now we are looking to expand to Mexico, so
it has definitely added value to our employees. We are
expanding what we call our WIN HR portal, our employee
portal. So anything that we can put at the finger tips of
our employees is adding value to our employee. We are
very excited to provide that value, too. And all the
feedback that we have been given from the case
management and the call centre in Shared Services is
positive. So that‘s further adding value to our employees,
and therefore it is adding value to our company. It has
been an overall positive experience.
Editores
Rodrigo Lang
Vanessa Saavedra
SSON: How is this HR model helping you to add
value back to the business?
Jim: Many of the benefits that come out of Shared
Services model are not the business benefits that were
originally listed in the business case. They are the benefits
that you really only get through an in-house solution. I‘ll
just give you a few examples. Say you build HRIS and
project management capability in-house and an
organization enters into a merger or acquisition. Part of
your business case becomes the avoidance of contractor
and consultant costs to manage that project. It can be
hundreds
Conselho Editorial
Caio Fiuza
Eduardo Saggioro
Vitor Marques
Contato: pesquisas@visagio.com.br
www.institutodegestao.com.br
Shared Services News | Edição 10
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