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WEDNESDAY
October 13th 2010
YEAR 2 | No 15
TCM: Shared Value
By Denise Bedell
www.gfmag.com
There are many options for how to set up
and roll out a shared service center, providing
an approach for every budget and corporate
structure.
page 5
Key Performance Indicators
as a Tool to Add Value
By: Jim Whitworth
ssonetwork.com
Our contributors look back on the key developments
which made the space what it is today…
Top 10
Developments that
Changed Shared
Services...
By: Jamie Liddell, SSON
ssonetwork.com
It’s remarkable to think that the space in
which we operate - now a skein of connected
activities across numerous industries and
sectors employing millions of people and
involving many billions of dollars - has only
existed in anything like its current form for
a mere handful of years.
page 4
Service Level Agreements based on measuring
key indicators of performance are usually an
integral part of the design of Shared Service
processes and of establishing the framework
for the ongoing supplier/client relationship
for both Shared Services and Outsourcing.
Page 6
Saving Money at Kingfisher:
The Less Obvious Way
By: Fränzel Schneider, SSON
ssonetwork.com
Michael Hyltoft, Finance Program Manager,
Kingfisher, tells SSON more about employing
various less obvious ways to save money with
astonishing results and assisting companies
reduce spend by up to 50 million....
page 9
TCM: Shared Value
By Denise Bedell
www.gfmag.com
As the recession thaws and purse strings again begin to open
for slightly larger-scale projects with a longer-term return
on investment, shared service centers (SSC) are in central
focus for CFOs and treasurers eager to reduce costs and
centralize processes. Dwayne Prosko, director in KPMG’s
shared services and outsourcing advisory group, notes that
centralizing transactional activities frees up finance staff to
focus on more value-added activities like decision support
and business analytics that help drive the revenue growth
of the business. “In short, it enables finance to be less of a
numbers-checker and more of a business partner,” he says.
The increasing interest in moving to shared services is
being driven by the economy and the continuing need for
companies to increase efficiency and reduce cost, according
to Al Fish, vice-president of professional services at Basware
North America. “The shared service center doesn’t just bring
cost savings, it provides a lot of other benefits to companies:
They are able to unify processes and have better visibility into
the financial activities of the company,” Fish says.
Depending on budget, corporate preferences and goals of
the project, how a shared service center will be implemented
can be very different from company to company. At a time
when many businesses have limited available resources, some
are taking a slower approach to implementation, while others
are pushing forward with regional or global rollouts to garner
maximum advantage. In addition, companies have very
different stances on how to structure an SSC—whether to
house a single function within one SSC and focus on driving
costs out of that process as much as possible, or to have
multifunction SSCs.
In some cases companies are looking at shared service as a
deployment option for a particular function. The goal is then
to implement absolute best practice within that service and
function and set very specific efficiency and cost-reduction
goals. Notes Fish: “With the SSC you are able to build up
individuals with specialties that are able to effectively work
on specific processes, making them more proficient in those
specializations.”
According to Craig Himmelberger, solution marketing
director at software provider SAP, this approach is quite
common in the US. He says: “In the American approach,
they might say, ‘Let’s make this the best A/P [accounts
payable] center we can,’ and they are very focused on cost
saving and metrics.” In contrast with the multifunction
approach—where various functions are offered on a shared
service basis—the focus is more on qualitative metrics. Says
Himmelberger: “More so in Europe we see deployment of
multifunction SSCs, where instead of having a center for
specialty, the shared service center is built bearing a broad
range of processes in mind.” One advantage of the multifunction approach is that as new functions are rolled out, the
SSC staff become that much faster at managing the rollout
process.
Choosing How to Roll It Out
In addition to the types of function that are included in an
SSC, companies also have a number of options for how to
roll out a shared services center. How a company chooses
to go forward with such a project will depend on a number
of factors, including its project goals, budget, corporate
structure—centralized versus decentralized—and corporate
environment. Companies may choose to roll them out on
a grand scale, centralizing and pushing an entire function
or department into the SSC at one time; or they may take a
slower approach, offering the service to an in-house unit to
develop.
The second approach treats the SSC as a cost center that
must market its service to subsidiaries and bid competitively
for the business. There are a number of advantages to this
approach. First, it encourages internal competitiveness and
efficiency creation. Second, services can be rolled out slowly,
and the costs can be extended over a longer period of time.
Finally, for a decentralized company where individual
units may push back against a full rollout, this is a gentler
approach. Global relocation firm Crown Worldwide is a
clear example of the gradual rollout and internal marketing
of shared services. The company has a shared service center
in Malaysia. Alpesh Sanghavi, director of operations of
the group shared service center at Crown Worldwide, says:
“Given the acquisitions and expansion that Crown saw over
the past ten to fifteen years, it made sense to set up a shared
services center.”
Because Crown expected some resistance to the shared
services concept and did not want to disturb local autonomy,
it chose to commence with a small operation and build
gradually. Sanghavi says the goal is to be able to move things
to Malaysia at a pace that is comfortable for local in-house
clients and for the SSC itself. The Crown SSC went from one
staff member in 2006 to its current staff of 51.
Although there are several different approaches that a
company can take, one thing that is clear is the companies are
once again seeing the value of moving to a shared services
approach for finance and treasury functions. Robert Cohen,
vice-president at Basware, says: “When things get tight
and profits get squeezed, companies look more closely at
the internal organization to save money. As a result more
organizations are being charged with finding ways to cut
costs, and the SSC is a natural conclusion.”
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Key Performance Indicators
as a Tool to Add Value
By: Jim Whitworth, Independent Shared Services Specialist
ssonetwork.com
Sometimes, by wrapping Service Level Agreements (SLAs)
and key indicators of performance (KPIs) together, there is a
risk that KPIs are seen purely as a tool to enable service users
and stakeholders to validate that the performance meets the
basic needs of their area of the business and for service
providers to be able to check they have achieved satisfactory
output. Whilst there is a clear need to fulfill those functions,
there is much more potential in the humble KPI.
It is possible to identify three main applications for KPIs...
1. Governance and management of the relationship between
service provider and service user.
Most veterans of Shared Service and Outsourcing
projects will have plenty of horror stories of the disputes
and conflicts (in both directions) between Shared Service
Centers and the distributed business units that use their
services. At the very least KPIs provide for some factual
arbitration of the “service is getting worse” – v- “service is
getting better” arguments. Fully utilized, they provide the
foundations of strong governance and can even enable
performance based charging.
2. Reporting to executive management
As this is often for the same executive management that
provides sponsorship (and funding) for the program there
may be a temptation for program leaders to emphasize
(even over-emphasize) the importance of KPIs for
reporting successful achievement in order to secure that
sponsorship. The risk of this approach is that many
executives may not attach great importance to having their
own KPI driven reports to read particularly if they haven’t
had anything like the same level of performance reporting
from the previous organizational structure.
The following use of KPIs needs to raise its profile and
really shape their design and usage:
3. Managing the Shared Service Center
Even without relationship management or executive
reporting (yes, there are organizations that don’t see the
need for either), KPIs are absolutely essential for SSC
leaders to maximize the effectiveness and efficiency of
the center.
When thoroughly planned and included at the onset of
any Shared Services program, KPIs can reflect the drivers
within the original Business Case, monitor the added value
of the SSC and, most importantly, provide a tool for the
SSC management that indicates areas for improvement and
records achievement against that.
The focus of effective SSC management has to be a mix
of maintaining absolute consistency with continuous
improvement and innovation. The apparent dichotomy in
that mixture can be solved by ensuring that the innovation
and change is based on closely measured steps. KPIs enable
that measurement.
If KPIs are used to measure strengths and weaknesses
in performance they will highlight potential areas for
improvement not only in those weaknesses but also in the
progressive growth of strengths. Armed with the same KPIs
to track the impact of change over time, the SSC manager
has the ability to monitor and control that impact and
ensure that any risk to the overall consistent process delivery
quality is minimized. Taking this approach utilizes the KPIs
as measures of overall ongoing performance across the
operation and as monitors of the successful impact of steps
taken to improve.
Having identified the potential of the role of KPIs in
managing and improving the SSC the next step is to
determine the content in order that it maximizes opportunity
and that the KPI output can be understood in terms of the
value of the opportunity and the level of achievement of
that value. The big question when specifying KPIs and the
data collection necessary to support them is “what shall
we measure?”. Frequently, the answer is provided by the
provider/user discussions as the SLA is drafted rather than
the needs of the SSC’s own management, bringing us back to
the issue of KPIs purely establishing that performance meets
basic requirements rather than maximizing potential. Even if
users/clients are happy, further reduction in cost and higher
than expected performance may be highly advantageous to
the provider. Cost benefits may be retained or shared and
performance quality benefits, if proven to add value, may
produce opportunities for increased charges. So, an element
of looking at KPI design from a cost/value perspective starts
to become attractive.
As mentioned above, a good place to start may be the
business case and associated operational costing of the
SSC. This should illustrate the expectations for the cost of
providing the functions to be undertaken and the scope and
transactional volumes of those functions. In simple terms
it should be possible to extract the cost per item (whether
that is per invoice, per business unit close, per ledger entry
or whatever). Some of the KPI design can then be focused
on monitoring the build up of that cost (resources deployed,
speed of process, etc.). There may even be an opportunity to
simply reduce the number of transactions whilst maintaining
the cost per transaction. For example, in the Order to cash
area the number of transactions raised may include not
only invoices but also credits for corrections and re-bills. By
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reducing the requirement for credits and re-bills the reduction
in transactions may be mirrored by a reduction in cost.
Similarly, establishing whether there is a relationship between
accounts payable invoice line items and processing cost per
invoice may enable changes to supplier invoicing that reduce
processing time and cost. There are many potential ways to
reduce workload as well as ways to reduce cost per item.
Monitoring and valuing potential improvements in the
quality of performance is perhaps more difficult. Obviously,
errors, issues, reworking, etc. are objectively measurable but
quality beyond basic requirements can also be reflected in the
more subjective recording of user satisfaction. Translating
improvements in these areas to potential added value needs to
be a mixture of cost per transaction calculations as above plus
reasonable estimation of the opportunity value in improving
user perception, perhaps including the anticipation of time
and cost saving in user/provider interaction and stakeholder
management.
With a set of KPIs focused on SSC management and
improvement opportunities, supported by consistent
reporting and interpretation, it becomes possible to
identify those opportunities, consider action to implement
improvement, value the opportunities and create a financially
robust business case for that implementation. That business
case can be simply related to that for the original creation
of the SSC and the KPIs in place become the monitoring
measures for determining the success of the action taken. By
following a relatively scientific implementation of change to
one aspect of activity at a time, step by step, the KPIs will
identify whether impact is positive or negative. The simple
principle is to make sure a change to be implemented is
measurable within the scope of the KPIs, make the change,
use the KPI to measure the impact then continue or modify
the change accordingly. The consistency and quality of the
overall process delivery is only minimally at risk and step
by step measurability gives ready visibility to recognize any
actions that do not produce the required results and need
reversing. Where, more probably, the results meet or exceed
expectations, they can be welcomed not just as change but
for producing measurable added value.
Saving Money at Kingfisher:
The Less Obvious Way
By: Fränzel Schneider, SSON
ssonetwork.com
Michael Hyltoft, Finance Program Manager, Kingfisher, tells
SSON more about employing various less obvious ways to
save money with astonishing results and assisting companies
reduce spend by up to 50 million...
SSON: Michael, you have considerable experience
with designing and implementing P2P and O2C
solutions in various organizations such as Speedy Hire
and Kingfisher - in your experience what is the most
challenging aspect when implementing these solutions
and transitioning services?
MH: The most important thing is sponsorship. It boils down
to whether you have the right support in the organization
to implement the necessary changes. By default people don’t
like big changes and if you don’t have the right buy-in in the
organization you will struggle to make a success out of it.
SSON: At the Finance Transformation Europe 2010
conference, you’ll be speaking on the importance of
understanding the link between process and business
value in order to drive cost savings, could you elaborate
on this in greater detail? How easy is it to marry the two
and can you give us some examples?
MH: What I am going to talk about at the event is something
that has many names. It has been referred to as reverse
factoring or dynamic discounting. It’s all about optimizing
your working capital via payment. It’s the old adage: while the
buyer wants to extend the payment terms the supplier on the
other hand wants to be paid earlier.
It’s very important to utilize this scenario by making sure
that the strongest creditor actually funds the supply chain/
service supplier. It’s all about working closer together with
the supplier to eliminate the huge amount of billions tied
up in the supply chain, because at the moment we all (the
suppliers and buyers) need the cash to cover our cash flow,
but also to invest and improve our businesses.
SSON: You’ll also be discussing the importance of
effectiveness rather than concentrating on efficiency
when processing invoices. Why in your opinion is
effectiveness so important?
MH: It is because when people engage in general information
projects or shared services projects specifically - there tends
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to be an initial focus on headcount and productivity, which
in my opinion is not necessarily going to lead to major cost
savings. There are a lot of other ways in P2P which will
enable you to save money – like dynamic discounting and
cash flow which severely outway any kind of benefits you
might gain by making staff redundant. Other benefits many
people tend to forget about are control and transparency.
SSON: You’ve assisted organizations in reducing
spend by up to 50 million through effective process
management? What drivers helped you to do so?
MH: Firstly, having more efficient working capital. The
main companies I worked for had high AP spend; therefore
it was the small changes which made significant differences.
It is surprising how much money can be saved by reducing
write-offs, control and also just the value you get out of
transparency and control. Another important aspect people
tend to forget is the cost of your audit and finding ways to
lower the cost of your audit by installing a better system and
implementing better transparency.
SSON: In one of your sessions you mention ‘freeing
up funds for higher impact activities’ – we’re just
coming out of a recession – what advice can you give to
organizations who don’t necessarily have floating cash
available?
MH: In today’s market more offers are coming in for solutions
that have been proven and tested, for example instead of
paying the big capex costs and set up - you can now buy them
on a transactional basis. Of course the downside of this
option is it can be more expensive in the long run, but it does
allow organizations who are short on cash to benefit from
the technology many of the big companies have invested in
and produced in the last few years. These technologies are
now becoming standard products that you can buy off the
shelf. You can also buy what I would refer to as a utility,
which means you don’t have to invest in huge amounts of IT.
You will just have to be prepared to be flexible in relation
to what the processes look like, because the supplier usually
dictates what the process should look like but there is always
the possibility to enhance this model in order to meet your
requirements.
SSON: What are you hoping to take away from this
year’s Transformation Europe event?
MH: I take part in SSON’s Shared Services and Outsourcing
conferences on a regular basis, therefore I look forward to
seeing all the speakers at the conference. Some of the speakers
come from very far away to present at the conference and
I know that they are very interesting so I look forward to
hearing them present. I ‘m also keen to find out if there is
anything new on the market and anything I should be aware
of which could be beneficial to Kingfisher.
Top 10 Developments that
changed Shared Services...
By: Jamie Liddell, SSON
ssonetwork.com
Our contributors look back on the key developments which
made the space what it is today…
It’s remarkable to think that the space in which we operate now a skein of connected activities across numerous industries
and sectors employing millions of people and involving
many billions of dollars - has only existed in anything like
its current form for a mere handful of years. From concept
to delivery, the shared services and outsourcing space has
been granted a fraction of the development time which more
established activities such as manufacturing have enjoyed but nevertheless, in that time we’ve witnessed some truly
remarkable developments which have utterly revolutionized
the business environment - and, indeed, the very nature of
business.
As Ed Kirkby, Senior Consultant at EquaTerra, recalls:
“Having been involved in the IT industry since 1983 I have
seen many changes - and much re-inventing of the wheel.
Apart from the technology drivers and the advent of offshore
(e.g. India) there are other developments over this period of:
one-stop shop versus selective outsourcing (‘best in class‘),
new business models (ASPs/ISPs and Legacy), Business
Process Outsourcing, complexity and future proofing
considerations, more sophisticated financial engineering,
partnerships and joint ventures, commoditization of ‘me
too’ deals in mature markets as well as Sole-Source versus
Competitive Tender. These have all combined to make
outsourcing one of the most interesting market sectors to be
in, both from a historical perspective and the place to be in
the future – why? Because outsourcing works!”
Recently SSON reached out to a number of experts
and commentators from around the shared services and
outsourcing space to give their thoughts on the developments
which have made the space what it is today. Now, we present
the result: our Top Ten Developments Which Changed
Shared Services & Outsourcing. Enjoy! (And remember: you
can send your own thoughts to the editor.)
1. Technological advances
No surprises that this one’s on the list; pretty much every
one of our contributors mentioned technology in one
form or another, whether it be the incredible facilitating
impact of the internet or the development of specifically
process-related tools boosting companies’ efficiencies and
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productivity. It’s impossible to imagine life today without
many of the technological innovations which have taken
place, or reached maturity, during the period of time in which
the shared services and outsourcing space has blossomed and
boomed; it’s even less possible to imagine that space without
the technology upon which it is supported.
As The Hackett Group’s Tom Bangemann says: “the one
big enabler is technology, because without technology
developments - especially ERP 20 years ago - no global
business service or shared service organization of any sort
would work.”
2. Globalization
Alongside purely technological advances, of course, must
be placed the dramatic changes in the relationships between
nations and individuals, and the contracting or removal
of previously obstructive chasms between locations and
businesses, which have become known as globalization.
It is possible to conceive of a form of shared service, and
a variety of outsourcing, emerging in a non-globalized
environment - but it’s absolutely impossible to see how either
of those two concepts could ever have reached the levels of
complexity, or resulted in the remarkable gains in efficiency
and effectiveness, which they have achieved thanks to what
journalist and academic Frances Cairncross has so elegantly
termed “the death of distance”.
“The key development that makes shared services and
outsourcing the successful model it is today is globalization,”
says CenterPoint Energy’s Julienne Sugarek. “Through
technology, we can be connected instantly to people in other
cities, states and countries. We can pass work products back
and forth as if our offices were down the hall from one
another. In addition, the promotion of free trade has led
to reduced transportation costs and the harmonization of
intellectual property laws has opened the doors to a new way
of doing business - business without borders.”
The Hackett Group’s Tom Bangemann concurs: “There are
today tens, possibly hundreds of locations able to provide
GBS services. The supply side is also bolstered by the growth
of the BPO and ITO industries. Without adequate supply the
can be no match between supply and demand! Globalization
has also led to organizations taking a more business and
less local or nationalistic view on labor issues, hence the
willingness to deploy GBS SDM has increased and today
almost all medium and large organizations use this SDM (to
some extent).”
3. The development of outsourcing as a distinct
profession
As outsourcing first touched upon, then burst into, the
economic and corporate mainstream, it of necessity
became an activity which required increasing specialization
and particularization on the part of those engaged within
it. Whereas at the beginning of the outsourcing boom
developments were being driven by experts in other fields
who were able to envision how radically outsourcing
would impact upon business practice, today’s outsourcing
practitioners are finely-tuned specialist professionals (you
know who you are…) with an understanding of their
environment immeasurably broader and deeper than that of
those first pioneers.
“There was a time when professionals with general
transaction skills were the primary architects of outsourcing
transactions, and buyers typically engaged in shared services
and outsourcing relationships with limited or no specialized
expertise. Over the past 10 years, outsourcing advisory has
grown into a distinct specialization for lawyers, consultants
and procurement professionals. A host of certifications
have also been created to validate this specialization. The
specialization of these intermediaries has led to increased
competitiveness and standardized industry transaction
practices,” maintains Robin Rasmussen, Director, Shared
Services & Outsourcing Advisory at KPMG.
4. The rise of value-adding finance roles
Just as the development of outsourcing has required the
development of outsourcing specialists, so too changes
in the nature of the finance function (with the evolution
of shared services a notable contributory factor) have
required the emergence of a new set of roles within finance
- a development which is still very much ongoing. The
requirement for added value, and the response of businesses
to changes in the nature of businesses themselves, have
created a new generation of professionals with remits
often far beyond those of their predecessors, wrestling
with challenges which previously might not have existed, or
might at least have been considered to reside well outside the
responsibilities of finance teams.
“Perhaps more ‘work in progress’ than completed
development, the growth of value-adding finance roles outside
both the traditional finance department and the shared service
arena has certainly changed the culture within which SSO
and BPO programs are implemented,” believes independent
finance and shared services expert Jim Whitworth. “Early
shared services had to fight their way through considerable
resistance, often from finance management who sought to
protect the traditional departmental structure and roles that
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had shaped their careers to date and had been expected to
continue to do so. Businesses fuelled the conflict by failing
to get to grips with building and executing a vision for the
contribution that finance professionals could continue
to make outside the newly acquired SSC or outsource
partnership.”
Whitworth continues: “Fortunately, we’re now seeing many
more alternatives for finance careers outside the Manager
– Controller – Director route in a traditionally structured
finance organization. Developing systems and processes in a
technically complex world, ensuring compliance and controls
to meet ever-increasing regulation and partnering business
leaders in decision making have all become careers in their
own right in recent years. As this greater range of options
continues to develop, the shared services practitioner may
no longer be the enemy threatening the finance management
status quo but the key to future opportunity. Greater support
brings faster implementation, easier stabilization and stronger
sustainability as those retained from the old organization
focus on new roles that challenge and add value.”
5. The rise (and fall) of the mega-deal
It’s an old lesson in business as well as in math that the
numbers just keep getting bigger over time (even if your
own share of them seems to shrink by the day…). Once
outsourcing built up a full head of steam, and companies
got to grips with the advantages and attendant risks (and
how to manage them) associated with the practice, it was
only a matter of time that the deals taking place grew to
occasionally jaw-dropping scale. Of course, that created a
whole new realm of risk…
“The ‘mega-deal’ not only helped the outsourcing industry
address the needs of large, multi-national companies,
but it also elevated outsourcing decisions to the highest
levels of the buyer organization, which in turn helped
establish outsourcing as a permanent option for operations
strategy. Ironically, the ‘mega-deal’ also exposed some of
the limitations of the outsourcing business model, as it
magnified the impact of execution and governance failures.
Service providers, buyers and their advisors continue to
look for ways to address the limitations and risks exposed
by the mega-deal,” says Eugene Kublanov, Director, Shared
Services and Outsourcing Advisory at KPMG.
6. Best-practice vision for support functions
Some of the developments that have contributed to the
evolution of shared services and outsourcing have been
very tangible - technological advances being a case in point.
Others, however, have been extremely abstract - and an
example of this is the emergence of the concept of best
practice within support functions. Abstract or not, however,
the impact of this concept has been all but immeasurable:
the idea that support functions - particularly within finance
- could be optimized and made efficient in the same way as
an assembly line or a supply chain has revolutionized the
back office and helped drive some of the most important
advances in business practice in living memory.
“Shared services started in the mid 1980s in finance functions
with some enterprising US-based corporations who took a
look at finance costs as a percentage of revenue, realized they
had a full accounting function in every manufacturing plant
or depot, and thought they could halve the cost or better
by co-locating it,” explains Philip King of Atos Consulting.
“The name ‘shared services’ was invented to make it more
palatable to concerned stakeholders. It was purely a costreduction play at the time. And to some degree this is still
paramount - but, as most people who reads these pages know,
there is more to it than that. The words ‘shared services’ now
have real meaning: shared resources, shared responsibility
and real customer service provision. However the real
added value from shared services is realized when it is an
integral and fundamental part of a functional transformation
preferably aligned to business strategy or transformation.
And this is applicable to any support function – e.g. Finance,
Procurement, HR, IT, Facilities & Estates, Customer
Management/Service.
“One of the key developments that have sustained and
enhanced the role of shared services is the development
of the best-practice vision for support functions. This can
be traced back to consulting firms in the 1990s that began
to spread the gospel of ‘the future of finance’ with a best
practice organizational architecture including corporate
‘centers of excellence/expertise‘, ‘business partners‘, and
‘shared services’ - the three key functional sub-divisions of an
optimal support function organization. This has since been
applied to all support functions – the terminology might
be slightly different, but the principle is the same. Focusing
the right activities in each area and aligning the appropriate
resources multiplies the benefits: e.g. shared services support
the business partner role by taking away the distractions of
routine transaction processing and providing consistent data.
The organization will benefit from the strategic value the
business partner can provide if the right type of resource is
deployed and the objectives of the role are clear.
“Done well all three parts of this support function vision
are complementary and the value of change is multiplied. If
done poorly this leads to a lack of clarity and belief in the
shared services idea, as the full benefits are not realized. The
terminology differs slightly from one function to another,
but the concept is proven. Many organizations still have not
fully grasped this fundamental vision, but it is even more
important in the current climate, so for those who have not
yet picked up on this key development, I’d urge you to work
at it.”
7. Increased buyer savvy
Outsourcing providers might be tempted to provide just
a minimum satisfactory level of service (well, it’s human
nature, maybe) but even if that weren’t a rather short-
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termist proposition, in today’s outsourcing environment
it’s tantamount to commercial suicide. A major reason for
this - alongside the proliferation of competing providers
eager to snatch away every unsecured morsel of trade - is
the increased savvy among buyers of outsourced services. As
the industry has matured, so too has buyers’ understanding
of what exactly can be gained - and at what cost - from the
various providers offering their services.
“Outsourcing and shared services are now central to
enterprise strategy and higher up the value chain, with most
businesses having invested in new skills and re-organized
themselves to identify optimum sourcing strategies, execute
deals and govern the new service models. Whilst we still have
further to go before sourcing can be thought of as a truly
mature industry the trend is increasingly for more educated
buyers, investing in new capabilities and expecting more
from providers who in turn are maturing, consolidating and
specializing to meet increased client expectations. These
factors taken together have changed our view of what can
be successfully externalized or optimized to include value
and knowledge based requirements as well as commoditized
services,” says Tony Rawlinson, Managing Director, Financial
Services Advisory, Europe & Asia Pacific for EquaTerra.
8. The rise of India (and the rest)
“Outsourcing” might be excessively closely linked with
“India” in the minds of many consumers in the developed
world but there’s a reason why that link was forged in the
first place. India has been the powerhouse of the offshore
outsourcing boom: its hyperpotent combination of
technological prowess, well-educated and -skilled employees
and that all-important labor arbitrage has propelled the
sub-continent to the very forefront of this dynamic space,
resulting in vast gains for the Indian economy - and for
many companies worldwide who’ve taken advantage of this
incredible boom.
“The unmatched ability of top tier India-based outsourcers
to recruit, train, hire and onboard hundreds of thousands
of people each year established the offshore delivery center
as a viable service delivery model for services providers. It
also established a new competitive segment of outsourcing
service providers that did not originate in the U.S. or Western
Europe. This in turn led to new entrants not only from India,
but from various other developing countries that began to
compete with the top tier, multi-national service providers,”
asserts Eugene Kublanov of KPMG.
9. Changes in the accountancy environment
Of course outsourcing and shared services aren’t just about
finance - but a significant proportion of activity within the
space remains driven by the finance function, and a proportion
of that drive comes from the developments within the global
accountancy environment which have had such an impact on
business within and beyond shared services and outsourcing
in recent years. Sarbanes-Oxley and similar regulatory efforts
have created new realms of complexity which businesses
have had no choice but to address - and shared services has
become both a useful tool to address this, and profoundly
affected by the very changes which new legislation has driven.
“The evolution of the accountancy space over the past
couple of decades has really provided a huge driver for many
of the developments we’ve seen in back-office structures
and the outsourcing profession,” says independent finance
professional Keith Osborne. “Added complexity in terms
of compliance frameworks - not to mention the increased
severity of sanctions for those failing to comply - has
driven compliance up the corporate agenda and created
an opportunity for shared services to become centers of
accounting excellence, alongside the need to keep down costs
during this leap in complexity. And of course several of the
leading accountancy firms have been at the forefront of the
outsourcing and shared service revolution in an advisory
capacity as well as transforming their own businesses…”
10. Governments’ acknowledgement of outsourcing’s
influence on the economy
The impact of the outsourcing boom on the Indian economy
was mentioned above - but of course it isn’t just India that
has enjoyed the fruits - and had to deal with the issues arising
from - the globalization of outsourcing. Both provider
locations and governments of countries from which work is
being outsourced have had to face up to the ways in which
outsourcing impacts upon local and national economies,
and international trading relationships. Policy must now
encompass the economic realities which outsourcing has
forced upon pretty much every country on earth - giving rise
to many challenges to which the solutions have not yet been
found.
“Various governments in the developing world (India is a
salient example) have acknowledged the shared services and
outsourcing sector as a substantial and positive influence
on their economy. That acknowledgment has led to policies
which encourage human capital development, and the
modernization of infrastructure and commercial regulation.
This in turn has facilitated the globalization of the shared
services and outsourcing sector beyond its geographic
origins,” believes KPMG’s Matamba Austin.
Editores
Rodrigo Lang
Vanessa Saavedra
Conselho Editorial
Caio Fiuza
Eduardo Saggioro
Vitor Marques
Contato: pesquisas@visagio.com.br
www.institutodegestao.com.br
8
Shared Services News | Edição 15
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