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WEDNESDAY
December 15th 2010
YEAR 2 | No 17
Key Metric: Shared Service
Usage Levels
By: The Hackett Group
ssonetwork.com
Done correctly, and for the right reasons, a shared service
centre can bring significant benefits to organisations in
both the public and private sector.
Basware Article: The
Future of Shared
Services
According to the most recent Hackett
Shared Services Performance Study, the
vast majority of companies using shared
services report improvements of at least
10% in productivity, quality and customer
service levels -this recent key metric
explains.
page 2
By: Andrew Jesse, Vice President, Basware UK
sharedserviceslink.com
There are many reasons why businesses
should and do consider centralising processes
into a shared service centre. For many private
sector businesses, cost-cutting, increasing
spend visibility and compliance are just some
of the key drivers for adopting a shared service
model; while for public sector organisations,
initiatives such as HM Treasury’s 2009
Operational Efficiency Programme (OEP)
or the Coalition government’s public sector
spending cuts for 2010 and beyond have
provided stimuli for taking a closer look at the
way in which they work.
page 4
Your Shared Services Check
List For 2011
By: Susie West
sharedserviceslink.com
I’m sure you’ve heard it countless times,
but if you work in shared services, you’re
on a journey. And it’s true, shared services
has a life cycle: it has an obvious birth and,
as many purists believe, it should result in
some kind of death.
page 3
Key Metric: Shared Service
Usage Levels
By: The Hackett Group
ssonetwork.com
According to the most recent Hackett Shared Services
Performance Study, the vast majority of companies using
shared services report improvements of at least 10% in
productivity, quality and customer service levels -this recent
key metric explains
Metric Definition
Finance’s level of use of shared services (Fig. 1) is a direct
reflection of how many transactional FTEs have been
centralized. It is also an indirect reflection of the levels of
consolidation, standardization and automation that the finance
function has been able to achieve. The metric is easy to derive
– it is simply the percentage of transactional FTEs in a given
finance process that are located in a shared services center,
divided by the total number of transactional finance FTEs.
But shared services do more than deliver cost reductions;
they are a route to improved effectiveness. According to the
most recent Hackett Shared Services Performance Study,
the vast majority of companies using shared services report
improvements of at least 10% in productivity, quality and
customer service levels. For example, they have 43% fewer
billing errors, require 25% less time to close the books, and
report 28% more focus on proactive decision making.
Strategic Implications
As companies increase their adoption levels of shared
services, finance functional leaders are able to spend more
time developing strategy and supporting the business, and
less time managing day-to-day processes. At the same time,
shared services have become fully functional, standalone
entities that are delivering services back to the business in
a timely and efficient manner. Encouraged by their success,
finance leaders have given SSOs much greater latitude to
make the changes required to drive down costs and improve
process efficiency and effectiveness.
Why This is Important
Optimizing shared services and service delivery is a critical phase
in the journey to greater efficiency and lower costs in finance.
As shared services have gone from a leading-edge practice to
near-universal usage over the past decade, they have delivered
on their efficiency and effectiveness promises. Notably, around
two-thirds of SSOs have saved their companies 20% or more
on annual operating costs. In fact, 21% of companies report
saving more than 40%. It’s no coincidence that world-class
companies have much higher shared services usage levels and
much lower costs of finance (Fig. 2).
www.institutodegestao.com.br
2
Your Shared Services Check
List For 2011
By: Susie West
sharedserviceslink.com
I’m sure you’ve heard it countless times, but if you work in
shared services, you’re on a journey. And it’s true, shared
services has a life cycle: it has an obvious birth and, as many
purists believe, it should result in some kind of death.
Leisure company TUI is an example of an operation that had
a clear birth, middle bit and death when processes were finally
automated, converted to electronic and outsourced. Once the
shared services director had done his job, he was without a job.
So when we look at 2011, it’s wise to stop, find some time to
take a breather and ask yourself, where is this journey taking
us? What does the final destination look like? As the focus
for shared services moves towards adding value, does the
journey only end when you shut shared services down?
Whether you consider it a tool to help you standardise and
eliminate processes, or you see it as an enabler that turns
finance into an instrument that helps the company grow, here
is a check list of factors that will help your shared services
deliver results in 2011.
We’ll start with six items today. We’ll share another six
onwww.sharedserviceslink.com on the 21st December so be
sure to come back then.
1) Involve procurement
Shared services is an enabler to help improve the performance
of purchase to pay. Gone are the days when we treated
accounts payable (AP) 0as an isolated function. Shared services
leaders realise that the performance of their AP activities is
highly dependent on the level of support they receive from
procurement. AP key performance indicators (KPIs), like cost
per invoice, payment on time, electronic-invoice volumes,
can all be improved or damaged by procurement. This is
why shared services professionals now refer to end-to-end
processes, like purchase to pay or order to cash.
If you are still operating as a silo today, make this single
change in 2011 and see your KPIs improve. Procurement
tends to get involved quickly when it realises the huge gains
it can make from working with finance, but you may have a
sales challenge ahead of you to secure its buy in.
2) Consider outsourcing if you haven’t already
There is usually an element of outsourcing in today’s
shared services. If you’re not outsourcing, ask yourself
why. If you have the scale, and recognise that certain
activities in the process add no value to your aims and
you add no value to the processes, then evaluate the
outsourcing option.
The horror stories of old have fallen by the way-side, and
BPOs are more focused on service delivery than simply
cost reduction. Increasingly, shared services automate and
outsource as much as they can, and then hone their talent on
becoming a centre of excellence. Perhaps this could be an
option for you in 2011?
3) Measure
If you are not already measuring then do. How can you
improve if you don’t know where you are? Set targets and
track progress towards them. One retailer I spoke to recently
told me that these are the areas she measures:
1. Cost per invoice
2. First-time match rate
3. Percentage of payment to terms
4. Invoices per FTE per annum
5. Percentage of invoices via EDI
6. Percentage of goods for resale invoices matched to a
purchase order number as well as a receipt
7. The number of invoices in query at period end and as
a percentage of total invoices
8. Percentage of accounts-receivable debt that is overdue
9. Percentage of expense claims that do not have receipts
10. Percentage of expense claims outside policy.
I know of shared services that have over 130 KPIs and one
SSC with just one. You don’t necessarily have to report all of
your statistics to your customer. Show them the breadth your
KPIs cover and ask them to tell you which five or ten are key,
then report on those every month.
Measurement for shared services is essential; you will always
need data to prove your point. If customers claim that service
levels have deteriorated since shared services got involved,
you can compare the baseline data against current statistics
to prove their information is incorrect.
4) Automate
The investment you make in your ERP is huge and you’ll
want to leverage it. One of the best ways is to look at your
process and identify the areas that can be automated. It is a
giant step towards touchless processing: the central aim of
shared services.
Many of the transactional activities within the purchase-topay process lend themselves perfectly to automation. For
example, matching line items on an invoice, reconciling bank
statements and balance sheets, capturing invoice data that
isn’t electronic, and distributing invoices for approval around
your company.
www.institutodegestao.com.br
3
Vendors like Readsoft, Basware, Trintech and Brainware win
deals every week because shared services leaders know that
this is a priority. They have reference customers who can
share the dos and don’ts with you, so the risk of adoption is
much lower than it once was.
5) Electrify
Take automation one step further and convert to electronic.
Join Caterpillar, Astra Zeneca, HP, Metso, Kelloggs, HSBC,
TNT Express, Sara Lee, GSK, and Johnson & Johnson: get
on the e-invoicing train!
There is, however, little point converting a broken process
to electronic, but if you have more than 30,000 invoices per
annum and your match rate is high, then ask your suppliers
to join your e-invoicing programme.
The key players in Europe continue to be Basware, Ariba
and OB10. If you haven’t already introduced e-invoicing,
start to think about the business case. Take a look at your
invoice volumes, how many people work in AP and how
many invoices match first time. If 80% of your invoices
come from 20% of your suppliers, then your e-invoicing
project should be straight forward. But remember the point
made at the top of the check list– if procurement is not
involved your project will fail.
Basware Article: The Future
of Shared Services
By: Andrew Jesse
sharedserviceslink.com
Why shared services?
There are many reasons why businesses should and do
consider centralising processes into a shared service centre.
For many private sector businesses, cost-cutting, increasing
spend visibility and compliance are just some of the key
drivers for adopting a shared service model; while for public
sector organisations, initiatives such as HM Treasury’s 2009
Operational Efficiency Programme (OEP) or the Coalition
government’s public sector spending cuts for 2010 and
beyond have provided stimuli for taking a closer look at the
way in which they work.
Nor is an interest in sharing services unwarranted. Done
correctly, and for the right reasons, a shared service centre
can bring significant benefits to organisations in both the
public and private sector, including:
6) Increase activity scope
If shared services is proving successful in AP, then increase
the scope to other process and even other functions. Shared
services works because it standardises and automates
transaction activities. You can apply this to any activity that
fits the profile.
● Lower operating costs
● Improvements in service quality (to finance staff and
business users)
● Access to staff with specialist skills
● Easier recruitment and retention of skilled/high
calibre finance staff
● Improved investment and innovation opportunities
● Adoption of world-class/best practice approaches
● Ongoing performance improvement
With so many reasons to say yes, the real question mark
over the widespread adoption of shared service models
is now one of ‘how’, rather than ‘if ’.
Increasingly, finance shared services organisations are
encapsulating processes in HR, IT, procurement, real estate.
The push towards business services is achieving momentum
as organisations scrutinise their functions and divide them
between those that are shared-services friendly and those
that aren’t. If shared services isn’t already having an impact
on functions beyond finance, perhaps 2011 is the year to
make this happen?
Making it work
As with any business decision, there are a number of factors
to consider before making any significant change to the
status quo. There is no right or wrong model to choose; every
organisation faces its own challenges – indeed, for some,
sharing services may not necessarily even be the right choice
– so there’s no such thing as a one-size-fits-all solution. Some
of the main (but not only) considerations include:
And that’s not all. I have another six items to add to
this check list that will help your 2011 plans. Visit www.
sharedserviceslink.com on 21st December (or why not use
our RSS feeds?) to download the second part of this article.
● Budgets – not just what you can afford to spend, but
also what you expect to gain from the change. Pricing
alone should not be the main factor behind decisionmaking. ROI, measured against agreed KPIs, is the best
Once you have e-invoicing at your shared services centre
you are within striking distance of touchless processing. But
don’t forget, it takes time to get the project going, so if you
want to be live at the end of 2011, then you really need to
have selected your service provider by July 2011.
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4
long-term gauge of a system’s effectiveness
● Reviewing existing systems – it’s difficult to know
what changes need to be made without first evaluating
what’s currently in place, where duplication exists and
what needs to be done differently
● Integration – whether it’s new technology to
incorporate, different processes or changes within
teams and departments, doing things differently will,
predictably, be challenging at first
● Process standardisation – while there are sometimes
valid reasons for different ways of working across
different sections of the organisation, it’s often this
disparity that leads to loss of control and visibility. It’s
important to work out why these different needs exist
and evaluate just how necessary they really are, before
deciding whether to keep or do away with them
● Legal considerations – every organisation has its
own compliance requirements and it’s important that
addressing these is built into the basic infrastructure of
any new system
● Senior buy-in – without the backing of the leadership
team, and a top-down approach to implementing
change, new systems are likely to hit stumbling blocks
at every level
Whichever of these are most relevant for your organisation, it’s
important that they are taken into account before any decisions
are made, otherwise they risk becoming insurmountable
barriers in the longer term. Most important of all is gauging
the outcome that is expected from making any momentous
change. Altering the way in which business functions operate
has to feed into the wider organisational objectives, not simply
be an exercise in jumping on the latest bandwagon.
What does the future hold?
With so many benefits to speak of, and the continued rise
in popularity of the various models, it seems natural to
consider what the long term implications are for the shared
services industry.
Not just cost-cutting
Recently cost-cutting has risen to the top of most business
agendas, but savvy leaders would probably have recognised it
as the short-term fix that it is. For most businesses there is
a point past which simple cost-cutting or price-slashing fails
to deliver true economies of scale. Straightening out longstanding processes and ensuring visibility and control of
every aspect of daily operations is a better catalyst for holistic
and sustainable efficiency.
While cost-cutting is an essential ask of a shared service centre,
the real benefit is the transformational power it holds and the
way in which it can drive change across the way in which an
organisation conducts processes and functions as a whole.
As Emmanuel Dowdall, Departmental Manager, Content
Consumer and Business Services IDA Ireland (Industrial
Development Agency) and Shared Services Forum Ireland,
says, “While cost-cutting is an important facet of business
operations, it’s not the sole dimension to be considered.
Exercising creativity and re-thinking traditional processes
are all important outputs of innovation that add value to the
wider business.”
Sandra Busby, Managing Director, South West and Welsh
Shared Services Forum, agrees, “Cost is certainly one factor,
but the real end goal should be world-class business practices,
driven by measurable SLAs and KPIs.”
More than just finance
Shared service centres were once primarily designed to
streamline financial transaction process, but they are
increasingly relevant for other back office functions such as
HR, IT and Procurement. Finance may have been among the
first departments where visibility and consolidation made not
just monetary but also legal sense; however, there is always
potential for bottlenecks in other areas of the organisation
where information is collected.
Increasing transparency, mitigating risk and ensuring
relevant compliance requirements are met are key priorities
for any organisation and it is no longer up to just Finance
teams to make them happen. As such, centralising other
functions into a shared service centre can significantly ease
the burden of control.
Says Emmanuel Dowdall, “From supply chain management
to IP portfolio management and content delivery, there are
a variety of business functions where shared service centres
can reduce cost replications and increase efficiency.”
Susie West, CEO, sharedserviceslink.com, describes some
of the motivations for moving functions other than Finance
into a SSC, “Within HR, Procurement, IT, Legal and even
Marketing, there are activities which do not require facetime, and can be readily automated, off shored, standardised,
centralised, and consolidated on a single system without it
being detrimental to the business.”
“With so much corporate legislation coming into effect in
recent years, particularly dealing with financial processes
and reporting, this is yet another area in which a centralised
resource can provide input and value,” agrees Marc Conway,
Steering Group Member, North West Shared Services Forum.
Moving up the value chain
In its infancy the shared service centre was primarily designed
to suit a tactical function within the business, focusing on
streamlining transactional processing and cutting costs.
However, there has been a subtle shift in this role; through
the sheer volume of data it gathers through data input and
processing, the shared services centre is a mine of valuable
information that can be provided to the business to aid with
decision making. Whether through input into budgets and
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5
resource planning or implementing operational changes such
as pricing structures, the SSC is increasingly able and expected
to impact the top line strategy of the business.
Says Susie West, “Rather than just being about data input,
shared services is now much more about providing information
(of course based on the data that they input), and providing
advice to the rest of the business to aid their decision making.”
That isn’t to say this upward mobility of the SSC function is
either immediate or inevitable. It is only as the organisation
matures further, and its motivations evolve, that cost becomes
less of a standalone driver. Once that has been established,
it is a logical leap for the data that a shared service centre
processes, to join up various disparate pockets of information
from across the business. ”
Jim Mason, International Senior Executive, Scottish
Development International and Scottish Shared Services
Forum concurs, “While there has definitely been evidence
of some ‘lower value’ functions being moved offshore,” he
explains, “It is definitely true that higher value functions such
as Finance and IT are prime targets for remaining onshore,
where they can provide input into the business.”
What has driven this transformation of the role of the SSC?
In many cases, technology and automation have had a huge
role to play, changing not only the existing processes but also
offering a glimpse of future possibilities.
Says Marc Conway, “the rapid evolution of technology has
significantly cut the cost of transactional processing, making
more information readily available than ever before. With the
current focus on doing more with less, it makes sense to take
advantage of every additional resource that any investment
yields.” But technology is not enough in itself.
Multi-skilling
The skill set within the shared service centre has a symbiotic
relationship with the demands of the industry as a whole.
As more specialised services are available, organisations can
and do take advantage of the value these can add to their
business. However, the increasing focus on specialising skills
is, in itself, a reflection of the increased demand for shared
services to move up the value chain.
“Consolidating business centres used to be only about costs
but today, there is much more focus on accessing specialised
skill sets that can deliver competitiveness and efficiency,”
adds Emmanuel Dowdall.
Increased collaboration
Whether through outsourced models or joint initiatives,
an increasing number of organisations – both private and
public sector – are finding themselves working more closely
together. It remains to be seen whether public and private
sector organisations are likely to work together in a shared
service context, but it seems likely that there are definitely
lessons for each to learn from one another. Private sector
organisations may have joined the shared service revolution
ahead of some of their public sector counterparts, but both
still face many of the same challenges.
The very nature of service industries brings the need to
communicate and collaborate effectively. Collaboration
between organisations and sectors is an integral part of creating
a stronger ‘whole’. On a more micro level, organisations
across the UK are finding themselves increasingly reliant on
the synergies gained from their partner, customer and supplier
relationships. Shared service centres and the organisations
they work with are no exception. However, what will be
interesting to see is whether the distinction between in-house
and outsourced shared service centres will blur over time.
Or indeed, whether it will become a case of services that are
currently outsourced coming back into the fold completely.
As Sandra Busby puts it, “the outsourced mode of shared
service centre, although very popular at the moment, is likely
to become less common once businesses feel ready to bring
those functions back in-house. When, rather than if, that
becomes the case, collaboration between teams is essential.”
Conclusion
Basware works with a number of organisations, across the
public and private sectors, that have made the move to
centralise their operations into a shared service centre. One
of the key findings from our experience thus far has been
that while shared service centres continue to gain momentum
and popularity in the UK economy, many still remain close
to the start of their metaphorical journey ; there are still
many variables that influence where they will head next.
Technological progress is a key factor; the movement and
actions of national and global markets are another. Whatever
the next step in the evolutionary process is, there can be no
gainsaying the benefits these models currently provide.
Editores
Rodrigo Lang
Vanessa Saavedra
Conselho Editorial
Caio Fiuza
Eduardo Saggioro
Vitor Marques
Contato: pesquisas@visagio.com.br
www.institutodegestao.com.br
6
Shared Services News | Edição 22
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