CSC announced today that the
NASA Shared Services Center
(NSSC), a public-private partnership
between NASA, CSC and the state
governments of Mississippi and
Louisiana, won the Best New
Captive Services Delivery award
from the Shared Services
Outsourcing Network. pág. 2
Launching and Managing
Shared Services: Cargill,
AstraZeneca and Dell to Discuss
Getting it Right the First Time
SSON and IQPC announced a new
conference, Launching and
Managing Shared Services, taking
place June 23-25, 2009 in Houston,
TX. pág. 5
CSC da Sonda Procwork por uma
reformulação que visa preparar a
operação para as novas demandas de
BPO pelo mercado. pág. 5
Cost reduction and customer
satisfaction are top of mind for
shared services leaders as they work
to support their businesses through
the recession, according to a new
study presented by Deloitte. pág. 3
At a London conference, companies
such as Aviva and Diageo revealed
mistakes and successes on the road
to making outsourcing work . pág. 4
NASA Shared Services Center Wins Top Honors
CSC announced today that the NASA Shared Services
Center (NSSC), a public-private partnership between
NASA, CSC and the state governments of Mississippi
and Louisiana, won the Best New Captive Services
Delivery award from the Shared Services Outsourcing
Network. This award recognizes the most successful
shared services organization launched within the last
three years. Approximately 30 public and private sector
organizations, including Fortune 500 companies,
submitted applications for the top honor. The award was
received last month during the 13th Annual North
American Shared Services Week 2009 in Orlando.
The annual Shared Services Excellence Awards honor,
recognize and promote both captive (in-house) and
outsourced shared services that demonstrate winning
practices for their organizations. Open to shared services
organizations from any country, the entries are judged by
a panel of leading industry experts on start-up strategy;
people, culture and change management; innovation and
automation; customer relationship management and
customer service; process efficiencies and control; and
level of maturity and future strategic direction.
"The partnership and spirit of cooperation between
NASA employees and CSC is second to none and was
essential to the NSSC winning this prestigious award,"
said Richard Arbuthnot, executive director of the NASA
Shared Services Center. "We're fortunate to have a
partner that is so committed to providing such great
service to all of our NASA customers."
"The partnership and spirit of
cooperation between NASA
employees and CSC is second to
none and was essential to the
NSSC winning this prestigious
award"
NSSC Executive Director Richard E. Arbuthnot
“CSC is proud to play an integral part in the success of
the NASA Shared Services Center and we value the
support of all of our teammates," said Thomas P.
Anderson, president of CSC's North American Public
Sector Civil and Government Health Services Group.
"Our support services have helped the agency improve
its quality of performance, resulting in millions of dollars
a year in cost savings, which can be redirected to core
mission programs."
CSC's relationship with the NSSC began in 2005 with a
business process agreement. Under the contract, CSC
provides administrative, financial, human resources and
procurement support services to approximately 20,000
NASA employees, applicants, contractors and university
partners. The systems and processes at ten NASA
centers and NASA headquarters are centralized through
the NSSC located at Stennis Space Center, Mississipi.
About CSC
CSC is a global leader in providing technology-enabled
solutions and services through three primary lines of
business. These include Business Solutions & Services,
Global Outsourcing Services and the North American
Public Sector. CSC's advanced capabilities include
systems design and integration, information technology
and business process outsourcing, applications software
development, Web and application hosting, mission
support and management consulting. Headquartered in
Falls Church, Va., CSC has approximately 92,000
employees and reported revenue of $17.1 billion for the
12 months ended Jan. 2, 2009. For more information,
visit the company's Web site at www.csc.com.
Contatos:
Chuck Taylor, Director
Office of Communications
North American Public Sector
Tel. +1-703-641-3430
e-mail: ctaylor26@csc.com
Rich Venn ,Manager
Media Relations
Tel. +1-310-615-3926
e-mail: rvenn@csc.com
Fonte: Reuters
14/04/2009
The NASA Shared Services
Center (NSSC) opened March 1,
2006, on the grounds of Stennis
Space Center in Mississippi.
NSSC is a public/private
partnership between NASA and
Computer Sciences Corporation
Service Providers. NSSC
consolidated selected activities
from all NASA Centers in the
areas of: Financial
Management, Human
Resources, Information
Technology, and Procurement.
Deloitte Study: Recession-Minded Shared
Services Organizations Focusing on Cost
Cost reduction and customer satisfaction are top of mind for
shared services leaders as they work to support their businesses
through the recession, according to a new study presented by
Deloitte today at the 13th Annual Shared Services Week in
Orlando, Florida.
Shared services are defined as the practice of shifting support
processes out of a company's business units or divisions and into
a separate service-focused organization. The 2009 survey marks
the fifth in Deloitte's continuing series of research studies about
shared services organizations (SSOs).
"Across the globe, organizations are trying to minimize their
overall structural costs, so it is not surprising that cost control
was one of the most prominent themes in this year's results,"
said Susan Hogan, principal with Deloitte Consulting LLP and
leader of Deloitte's shared services practices. "Even though cost
reduction has always been a primary goal of shared services
organizations [SSOs], it's obvious that the recession has
increased the sense of urgency around delivering financial savings
to the bottom line."
Cost reduction was the most frequently cited driver for a number
of planned shared services initiatives, including:
- Shared services center relocation. Among respondents who
planned to relocate one or more of their shared services facilities,
92 percent reported that cost reduction was an important reason
for the anticipated relocation.
- Changing the number of shared services centers. Forty-eight
percent of respondents planned to increase the number of
shared services facilities over the next five years; of these, 46
percent reported that cost reduction was the main driver of the
increase. Of the 16 percent of respondents who reported they
planned to decrease the number of shared services facilities over
the next five years, 71 percent cited cost reduction as the main
driver of the reduction.
Driving incremental value. Seventy-two percent of
respondents reported that cost reduction was one of their top
three priorities for driving incremental value from their SSOs in
the next two years. In addition, 62 percent reported that
improving processes - a vital contribution to cost reduction - was
among their top three priorities.
Survey respondents are also placing greater emphasis on
customer satisfaction than they did in 2007. "In a tough
economy, shared services leaders know that they have to not
only deliver value, but strengthen relationships with their
customers and with corporate to work effectively," says Hogan.
In this year's study, maintaining high customer service levels
displaced output quality as the most frequently cited people
challenge, with 27 percent of the 2009 respondents identifying it
as an "extremely significant“ challenge. Forty-three percent of
the 2009 respondents also reported that increasing customer
satisfaction would be a top priority over the next two years.
The concern with cost has also not kept SSOs from striving to
increase their value to the business. SSOs continue to expand
into advisory services, a trend that was especially noticeable in
areas that have historically been slower to migrate into shared
services, including facility management, fleet management,
engineering, marketing, R&D, and production planning. Fifty
seven percent of the 2009 respondents reported they planned to
increase the number of advisory processes in their SSOs, up
from 47 percent in 2007.
Respondents had a very positive view of the impact of their
SSOs on the business. Ninety-one percent of respondents
reported that their SSOs had improved process efficiency, and
91 percent reported shared services had improved process
quality. Eighty-six percent reported that their SSOs had had a
positive impact on cost reduction, and 85 percent reported that
shared services had improved service levels. In addition, more
than 90 percent of respondents reported that their SSOs had
achieved consistent annual productivity improvements.
As in previous surveys, internal controls and compliance
continue to be one important area in which SSOs reduce costs.
79 percent of respondents reported that their SSOs lowered the
cost of maintaining and complying with internal control
requirements (such as the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002).
Additionally, 85 percent believe that their SSOs will play an
active role in the adoption of International Financial Reporting
Standards.
Talent is another area in which SSOs deliver business value.
Sixty-three percent of respondents reported that SSO employees
"sometimes" (51 percent) or "very often" (12 percent) move to
positions in the business, suggesting that many companies are
coming to view SSOs as a breeding ground for talent.
Contatos:
Jaime Riley
Public Relations, Deloitte
Tel. +1-206-716-6011,
E=mail: jairiley@deloitte.com
Fonte: Reuters
25/03/2009
Secrets of Outsourcing Success
UK multinationals have this week laid bare their sometimes
rocky relationship with outsourcing and described how
offshoring is helping them survive the recession.
Aviva Global Services (AGS), the business unit that provides
back office and IT services to the financial services group Aviva
(AV.L), set up its first in-house, offshore operation, known as a
captive, in 2003 with 2,500 staff.
By 2006, its offshore operations had grown to multiple captives
based in India and Sri Lanka employing 6,000 staff and with
responsibility for delivering a range of insurance processing and
back office IT services.
Speaking at the FT Outsourcing and Offshoring Conference this
week, AGS group CEO Steve Turpie said there had been
problems with the scale of the initial growth: "When we first
offshored we were learning. Like many organisations and we
made some mistakes," he told the conference.
Describing Aviva's initial decision to offshore large parts of
entire business processes as "probably a recipe for disaster", he
said that over the past two years the company had reviewed all of
the processes it outsourced.
AGS stepped back from running its own offshore operations last
year, selling its five captives to Indian outsourcer WNS, which
will use the captives to provide a range of insurance, accounting,
customer and other support services to Aviva under a $1bn deal.
Turpie said that the decision to step away had been the right one:
"The maturity of the BPO business is very different today, as is
the way that we do business with our customers.
"For example when you renewed a car insurance policy five years
ago most people would have done so by phone, whereas in
today's world 50 per cent of our customers renew over the web,
which is a very different business model for us.
"We made the decision on the basis of capability, cost and
flexibility and given what has happened in the last nine – 10
months we feel that we made the right choice."
Turpie said that the deal with WNS had allowed Aviva to
"accelerate what we are doing".
"It has helped dramatically improve efficiencies and customer
experience.
"The cost of what we have offshored and outsourced is relatively
small compared to the savings on taking one per cent off of our
claims costs, for example," he added.
He said that the transition of the captives to WNS had gone
smoothly so far and would be almost complete this year.
International drinks manufacturer Diageo (DEO) takes a very
different approach to offshoring to Aviva.
Diageo relies on a hybrid offshoring model, where services are
provided both from its own captive in Budapest in Hungary and
a number of offshore centres run by outsourcer Accenture
(ACN).
Its offshore operations started with the company setting up a
captive in Budapest in 2002, initially acting as a European shared
service centre but later providing financial processing services to
the US, Mexico and Australia.
Diageo gradually shifted more financial support services from its
offices in London to Budapest, such as the treasury function and
centralised reporting.
Speaking at the FT conference Carolyn Isaacs, global shared
services director of strategy and transition for Diageo, said: "We
had got to a stage where we had proved we could make it work
for a number of our markets around the globe but we realised
that for markets such as those in Asia and Africa the costs did
not work.
"That was where we looked at leveraging a partner to look at
outsourcing as well.“
About 15 months ago Diageo chose Accenture, which today
runs centres in Madrid, Manila, Bucharest and Shanghai,
handling a variety of IT services such as application development
and support.
Isaacs said that bringing in an outsourcer brought numerous
benefits, including mitigating the risk of relying on a single
offshore site, access to more languages and ability to shift
services between locations.
"We wanted to provide shared services that flex according to our
business," she said.
"We will look at outsourcing other services where we believe we
could get the same service and control but at a lower cost. We
have moved some activities from captive to outsource but we
always want to ensure the level of service at both.
"I would very much regard our future as about combining
captive and outsourcing in a hybrid model."
Fonte: Businessweek
01/05/2009
Sonda Procwork investe na ampliação de seu
Centro de Serviços Compartilhados
Considerado o principal centro de serviços compartilhados
(CSC) do Grupo na América Latina, a unidade da Sonda
Procwork de Gaspar passa por uma reformulação que visa
preparar a operação para as novas demandas de BPO (Business
Procwork Outsourcing) pelo mercado.
Para isso, a empresa está investindo R$ 1,5 milhão, que será
destinado para a contratação e capacitação de colaboradores,
além da instalação de equipamentos. “Estamos dando um salto
de 750 para 1,6 mil posições de trabalho, que estarão distribuídas
nos mil metros quadrados de área disponível para a expansão da
filial”, comenta Luiz Carlos Felippe, presidente da Sonda
Procwork. Ao todo, o site de Santa Catarina conta com três mil
metros quadrados.
Segundo o executivo, além dos novos contratos que foram
fechados recentemente para a prestação de serviço na
modalidade de BPO, a empresa está se antecipando para atender
a demanda de um requisito que virou prioridade na lista dos
CIOs e CFOs: a busca pela melhoria de seus processos com
redução de custos.
Com uma aposta de crescimento baseada na terceirização dos
processos de negócios, a Sonda Procwork vê na instabilidade
econômica sua estratégia de crescimento para 2009. De acordo
com o vice-presidente de vendas da companhia, José Ruy
Antunes, a tendência é que as empresas passem a terceirizar
primeiro as áreas de back office, externalizando seus núcleos de
Shared Services. “Este será apenas o pontapé inicial”, resume
Antunes.
Segundo o executivo, a partir do outsourcing de processos
transacionais, como contas a pagar e receber, recursos humanos
e controladoria, a meta será buscar projetos que antes eram
absorvidos pela China e Ásia, visto que estes paises deixaram o
topo da lista no quesito „fornecedores de TI‟ devido à queda do
dólar e aos riscos eminentes dos escândalos ocorridos nos
últimos meses.
Sobre a Procwork
O Grupo Procwork se consolidou, em dezesseis anos de plena
atividade, como líder brasileiro em serviços de consultoria e
integração de soluções de Tecnologia da Informação (TI).
Comprovadamente, de forma eficaz, atende aos diversos
segmentos de negócios, nas principais competências: ERP; BI;
ECM; CRM; SCM; Help Desk; Fábricas
Fonte: ERPnewus
22/04/2009
SSON and IQPC announced a new conference,
Launching and Managing Shared Services,
taking place June 23-25, 2009 in Houston.
The Launching and Managing Shared Services
conference aims to provide the tools for
establishing a strong SSC from the beginning.
Catering to those looking to plan and launch an
SSC at their organization, the program features
the interactive VP Think Tank, and longer,
interactive training sessions.
The training necessary for implementing shared
services is crucial. With extra pressure for time
and budget, companies are finding that there is
no room for trial and error during the planning,
launching, and stabilization phases of an SSC.
First time implementers and early adopters are
expected to “get it right the first time,” a
daunting task without the right tools.
These issues will be discussed at Launching and
Managing Shared Services, along with other
topics
including:
strategy
benchmarks,
building the business case ROI & cost benefit
analysis, stakeholder management tools, the
balanced
scorecard
SLAs
&
service
understanding and training & assessment tools/
Sessions will be led by an expert speaker faculty,
featuring companies such as CARGILL,
COORS
BREWING,
DELL,
APPLIED
MATERIALS, and ASTRAZENECA, and many
more. Participants are invited to discuss their
current challenges with other attendees and the
speakers,
throughout
the
conference’s
interactive forum-style setting.
For pricing and program information, visit the
event website.
http://www.iqpc.com/us/launchsharedservices
Shared Services News | Edição 21
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