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FRIDAY
February 11th 2011
YEAR 2 | No 19
5 Resolutions Every SSO
Professional Should Make And Keep - in 2011
By: Barbara Hodge, Online Editor, SSON
ssonetwork.com
Ten easy steps to compiling a compelling business case.
How to Build a
Business Case for
Shared Services
As you look at your 2011 objectives and labour
over next year’s budget, we’ve compiled five goals
to help you stay current with your customers’
demands and maintain a successful shared services
programme for the year ahead. But this year, we’re
not just providing you with goals - we’ll be helping
you keep them too....
page 3
The Next Big Wave in
Supply Chain BPO
By: Stuart Hearn, Partner, plusHR Consulting
ssonetwork.com
When to use this guide:
• My organization is considering moving
to a shared services structure for one or
more of its support functions
• Our current back-office processes are
not effectively supporting our business
• The running costs of one or more of
our support functions is too high
• Our current back-office structure may
not be best suited to meet the future
needs of our business
page 2
By: Niamh Byrne, Online Editor, SSON
ssonetwork.com
SSON speaks to Johannes Giloth, Global Head of
Supply Chain Networks, Nokia Siemens Network
about the next big market wave in Supply Chain
BPO for 2011
page 4
Centro de Serviços
Compartilhados e Business
Process Outsourcing (BPO)
By: Niamh Byrne, Online Editor, SSON
ssonetwork.com
Entre os anos de 2003 a 2008 estive bem envolvido
em projetos do crescente mercado de Terceirização
ou BPO. Dentre esses projetos, meu ponto de
partida foi a Criação de um CSC e é por esse tópico
que começarei esse artigo.
page 5
How to Build a Business Case
for Shared Services
By: Stuart Hearn, Partner, plusHR Consulting, SSON
ssonetwork.com
10 steps to building a business case for shared services
Shared services centers (SSCs) are becoming increasing
popular as a means of effectively providing support services
to the business, particularly in HR, Finance and IT. They may
be based on- or offshore, and may be part of the organization
or outsourced. Regardless of what the end solution might
look like, a solid business case will need to be built, and this
guide summarises 10 key steps in this process.
1. What are the ‘drivers’ for shared services?
In simple terms, why would the business benefit from shared
services? What business issues would a shared services
structure address? Common drivers for SSCs include
compliance, efficiency, future scalability, flexibility, cost
reduction, speed of delivery and reducing the administrative
burden to enable managers to focus on value adding tasks.
2. Gain supporting evidence
Once you have established your drivers, you will need to gain
clear evidence as to why your current structure and processes
do not effectively meet those drivers. You might consider
carrying out an audit of your structure and processes, looking
at areas such as compliance, efficiency, cost of function,
response times etc. The results can then be benchmarked
externally to gain further evidence as to how effective your
current function is.
3. Assess likely future business needs
It is important not just to look at current business
requirements, but also what the business needs will be in
say 2-3 years time. Will the business be growing, leading to a
larger number of transactions? Are acquisitions anticipated,
meaning that flexibility and speed of response will become
important? Think about how effectively the current structure
will be able to meet those needs and compare this against a
shared services approach.
4. What is the ‘burning platform’?
A ‘burning platform’ is a business-critical issue or risk
that could cause significant damage to the business if not
addressed. During steps 1-3 you will have gathered a number
of reasons why the business may benefit from a move to
shared services. Identification of a ‘burning issue’ amongst
this evidence will be important in order to gain buy-in from
the Board for the need to change. An example of a burning
platform for a recent European SSC implementation I
managed was meeting Sarbanes-Oxley compliance – this had
to be done, and it would not have been possible to achieve
this cost-effectively without a shared services structure.
5. Document the scope and successful outcomes
You won’t know at this stage exactly what the end result will
look like (where the SSC will be located, how large it will
be etc.) but you will need to define the scope of the SSC
activities in order to be able to create an estimated budget.
Think about what tasks or activities will be in and out of
scope for the SSC. At this stage you should also document
the anticipated successful outcomes of the SSC. You will
have already established the drivers for the project, but in
order to sell the concept to the Board, you will need to turn
these into positive outcome statements. For example: “The
shared services structure will… be 100% legal-compliant;
have lower operating costs per employee; bring a reduction
in headcount due to more efficient processes” etc.
6. Consider your project resources
Implementing shared services is a significant and timeconsuming project which will require dedicated and skilled
people. Do you have these resources internally, or will
you need to hire in external consultants? This will have a
significant impact on the up-front costs.
7. Assess the technology situation
Many SSCs are set up with the intention of bringing efficiency
savings due to enhanced processes. However, enhanced
processes are usually dependent on having appropriate IT
systems in place and this is a factor that is often overlooked
at the business case stage. Assess what systems are likely
to be required for your SSC and compare this to the level
of technology you currently have in place. Implementing
new IT systems and even customizing existing ones can be
extremely expensive and this must be factored into your
estimated budget.
8. Calculate estimated implementation costs
There will be a number of one-off costs to implement your
shared services solution which may include:
• Project team and consultants’ fees
• New building acquisition and setup
• Technology implementation and/or customization
• Recruitment of new staff
• Training of new and existing staff
• Redundancy payments
• Retention / project bonus payments
• Travel (if SSC is to be located overseas)
• Contingency
9. Calculate estimated annual savings and pay-back period
Whilst the key driver for shared services is not always cost
savings, it will be important to demonstrate an annual cost
saving once implemented in order to pay back the up-front
www.institutodegestao.com.br
2
costs. Costs savings may come from reductions in headcount,
cheaper salaries and building running costs as well as reductions
in error rates and legal issues. Centralised and consistent
processes can also reduce the costs associated with auditing.
Once these savings have been estimated, the pay-back period
for the implementation costs can then be calculated.
10. Calculate costs of not implementing shared services
To supplement the cost savings in step 9, it is useful to think
about what costs would be incurred by the business if it does
not move to shared services. This is especially important
when shared services is being considered in order to meet
future business needs or changes. Think about what would
need to be done in order to meet the drivers from stages 1
and 3 under the current structure and how much this might
cost. Compare this to the anticipated cost of meeting these
drivers via shared services and calculate the cost saving.
Next steps…
The business case produced at this stage will have many
assumptions and some of the cost and savings estimates
will be unsubstantiated. If approval is given in principle
to the project, then the next stage will be to undertake a
full feasibility study and produce a second, more detailed,
business case based on real costs. Avoid the temptation to
move straight into planning and implementation.
Typical outcomes from building an effective shared services
business case:
• The drivers and benefits of shared services along
with the ‘burning platform’ will be fully understood
by the key stakeholders
• The implementation costs, annual cost savings and
payback period will be transparent and made clear
from the outset
• If the business case makes commercial sense,
approval to proceed is likely to be granted.
• If shared services is not the appropriate solution,
this will be apparent, saving significant wasted future
investment.
Points of Discussion
Shared services centers (SSCs) are becoming increasing
popular as a means of effectively providing support services
to the business, particularly in HR, Finance and IT. This
article gives 10 steps to do so effectively, such as Step 7, ‘Assess the Technology Situation.’
5 Resolutions Every SSO
Professional Should Make And Keep - in 2011
By: Barbara Hodge, Online Editor, SSON
ssonetwork.com
Time to get real... Whilst diet fads and short-lived exercise
programmes fade fast, the ideas we’ve outlined below: “5
Goals Every Shared Services & Outsourcing Professional
Should Make - And Keep - in 2011” will last … and last!
Companies are finding themselves on a sounder financial
footing today; global markets are stabilizing – if slowly; and
business operations are more transparent, more accountable,
and leaner than ever. In addition, the sell-side has stepped
up to offer more flexible BPO solutions which many
organizations took up as a quick step to cost cutting.
But your clients are also savvier today. So, faced with smarter
clients, under constant pressure to up the ante, what do we
recommend? Here are 5 goals every BPO executive should
set themselves:
1. Hopefully the supply side can start spending
90% on innovation and improvements and 10% on
marketing versus the other way around
2. Put a penny in the keepsake jar for every time the
buy side says the words “you dont’t understand, we
are different” – I’ll be able to retire early
3. The buy side needs to limit their SLA spreadsheet
to only 1 page long versus the 20 pages today (of
which only Π page is meaningful)
4. Sell side needs to resolve to never promise that they
can do something they can’t, especially if they don’t
even understand the question
5. Buy side needs to understand that being able to
scan something and e-mail it doesn’t necessarily mean
that they have “state of the art automation” employed
1. Surely we have missed a few?! If you could three more
stages, what would they be?
2. When building the business case – you need to gain
evidence and reasons for implementing shared services – can
you share any tips on the best way to do so?
www.institutodegestao.com.br
3
The Next Big Wave in Supply
Chain BPO
By: Niamh Byrne, Online Editor, SSON
ssonetwork.com
JG: There is a specific triangle to follow:
• Capable; Highly flexible and be able to react to
volatile demands and customer specific requirements
• Reliable: Stick to promises, remain proactive in
communication and provide transparent end -to-end
information
• Lean: in term of process efficiency and inventories
SSON: Johannes can you describe your main role at
Nokia Siemens Network?
SSON: What immediate value will outsourcing your
supply chain add to an organisation?
Johannes Giloth: I am heading the Supply Chain and
Logistics side which is comprised of 2,500 employees
working in 130 different countries. I run 8 different local
and regional hubs - its more or less end-to-end operations
without the manufacturing and component purchasing.
JG: Firstly, through outsourcing, we managed immediate
cost reduction on our supply chain. Cost pressure is
something we should not forget. My target was finding a
deal in 2010 and secure a cost reduction. We have a longterm contract with CapGemini and return on investment
has become visible in 2010.
SSON: What’s been ‘ the big market -wave’ for Nokia
Siemens Network in 2010?
JG: The telecommunication industry has changed significantly
in the last couple of years, so we are suffering from significant
pressure in this competitive environment, such as the arrival
of Chinese competitors and the consolidation of many big
players in the market.
Traditional telecommunication companies like Nokia
Siemens have had to reshape completely and that was the
biggest change in the environment leading us to a very costcompetitive set-up, so we moved production on these services
to a lower cost location through our partner, CapGemini. In
addition, we also established competitive product areas, but
that is only one side of the medal.
The other difference is the industry is moving away from ‘box’
business to service business - meaning customers are more
interested in getting entire solutions and even outsourcing
their network to a network supplier. This requires a much
more end-to-end understanding of the entire value chain of
our customers. In that arena, cost-cutting and pressure on one
side and trying to understand the customer needs on the other
side - that business process outsourcing has to be understood.
The idea was not to just ‘lift and shift’ the existing shared service
centre to lower costs, but to move towards ‘transformational
outsourcing ‘. This should on the one side make the entire supply
chain much more efficient. And on the other side, the idea was
to really focus on the core competencies with the customer,
so it is an end-to-end logistics optimisation where a part of
that chain is outsourced to an external partner using their IT
Process redesign capabilities to accelerate the transformation.
Secondly - we cannot underestimate the benefit we have
gained from them in terms of process expertise and process
re-engineering from their IT background, demonstrating that
a BPO partner brings in process and IT knowledge which
helps us to accelerate the transformation.
Thirdly - we look at the ‘ catalyst’ function - it takes huge
change management to get those processes industrialised and
standardised and that is basically the target we are shooting
for. An external partner with a firm contract measured on
KPI can be used as catalyst to make that happen.
SSON: What do you see as the biggest opportunity for
Supply Chain Outsourcing as an industry in 2011?
JG: Transformational outsourcing will grow faster than
classical outsourcing, I have seen how well it has worked in
our case, but I think the time has come to take the next step,
to really let the customers focus on their core competencies
Traditional outsourcing is done in many cases when you
consider IT, Finance, HR and now the question is what is
next? I think the transformational outsourcing market is very
small still but the growth rate will be higher than in traditional
outsourcing - so it will not be a significant chunk of the
outsourcing cake next year, but it will be a growing segment.
SSON: Can you define what an effective Supply Chain
BPO should look like?
www.institutodegestao.com.br
4
Centro de Serviços
Compartilhados e Business
Process Outsourcing (BPO)
Por: Márcio Silva
administradores.com.br
Entre os anos de 2003 a 2008 estive bem envolvido em projetos
do crescente mercado de Terceirização ou BPO – Business
Process Outsourcing. Dentre esses projetos, meu ponto de
partida foi a Criação de umCentro de Serviços Compartilhados
(CSC) e é por esse tópico que começarei esse artigo.
Em 2003 quando residindo em Londres, fui convidado para
integrar um time que seria responsável pela estruturação e
implantação de um Centro de Serviços Compartilhados (CSC)
Europeu. Naquela época, ainda não estava muito familiarizado
com o conceito de CSC, contudo, entendia de processos de
controladoria e sabia falar português, inglês e espanhol, logo
estava apto para integrar a equipe do projeto que cuidaria dos
países Ibéricos.
A multinacional que me contratava, um gigante no segmento
de artigos de higiene pessoal, tinha como objetivo, unificar os
processos de 17 entidades Européias (unidades comerciais)
distintas e pertencentes a Holding em um único local (Londres).
Para um contador por formação, recém chegado no Mundo da
centralização de serviços, a idéia parecia aceitável, no entanto
não muito “compreensível”.
Com o passar dos primeiros dois meses e já atuando nas entidades
da Espanha, Portugal, França e Itália, como Workshadower
(nome dado aqueles que mapeiam os processos e documentam
as atividades) comecei a compreender melhor os por quês
daquele grandioso projeto. Embora a Marca da empresa fosse
um dos seus principais ativos e transmitisse uma imagem global
de solidez e qualidade dos seus produtos, a realidade com relação
aos processos financeiros não era bem assim. Cada país tinha suas
regras, o aspecto cultural contribuía com muitas discrepâncias.
Eram 17 empresas totalmente diferentes, com personalidades
próprias, apenas fabricando e comercializando os “mesmos
produtos” (não exatamente). Enquanto uma entidade tomava
crédito no mercado para cobrir o saldo devedor bancário do
dia, outra entidade dormia com altas reservas em seu caixa. Um
simples exemplo como esse de desalinhamento de fluxo de caixa
mostrava que algo estava fora dos eixos.
Nesse momento, comecei a entender que os objetivos do
movimento de criação do CSC eram bem maiores: entender a
empresa, harmonizar os processos, adotar as melhores práticas,
garantir que recursos (financeiros e humanos) fossem utilizados
de forma total, prestar serviços a clientes internos e obviamente,
reduções de custos, expressivas reduções de custos.
Passaram-se 1,5 anos e o CSC foi totalmente implementado.
Aproximadamente 200 novos colaboradores poliglotas
integravam o CSC em Londres. Juntos eram responsáveis por
diversas funções de back Office (contas a pagar, a receber,
bancos, despesas, contabilidade financeira, dentre outros) para
todas as 17 entidades. Team Leaders e Process Especialists
garantiam a realização das atividades conforme níveis de serviços
acordados entre os clientes internos (entidades) e o CSC, além
das ações diárias de padronização, adoção de melhores práticas,
ganho em escala e documentação dos processos que ocorriam
em paralelo. O CSC funcionava a todo vapor!
Durante esse início de operação, o desafio maior foi o de garantir
a aceitação da existência do CSC por parte das entidades (filiais
comerciais) clientes. Antes, cada entidade liderada pelos seus
diretores e gerentes tinha liberdade e autonomia para fazer as
coisas do seu jeito. Com a criação do CSC a história mudava e
tinham que seguir as novas regras e procedimentos estabelecidos.
O descontentamento com a criação do CSC por parte das filiais
comerciais era fundamentado não somente pela perda de poder
e autonomia, mas também pelo ressentimento compartilhado
com aqueles muitos colaboradores locais com anos de empresa
que foram desligados no processo de criação do CSC.
Diante desse contexto, os dias eram bem desgastantes.
Reuniões entre as filiais e CSC para alinhamento, prestação
de contas, validação dos níveis de serviços (SLA’s) e níveis de
operação (OLA’s) aconteciam semanalmente de forma bem
hostis, contudo, aos poucos as coisas se ajustavam e com isso, o
CSC ganhava corpo e se mostrava como uma estrutura sólida,
autônoma que garantia a unificação dos processos, melhor
entendimento da operação, o conceito de uma empresa única
sob controle e eficiente financeiramente e operacionalmente.
No final do 2º ano de existência, num ambiente jovem e
multicultural, onde processos haviam sido quebrados em
pequenos pedaços e pessoas trabalhavam num ambiente
automatizado, porém um tanto “Taylorista”, a diretoria do
CSC preparava-se para um novo passo. Aquele que levaria
a empresa a um novo patamar, que garantiria foco total no
core business, melhores níveis de serviços e principalmente,
consideráveis reduções de custos. Iniciava-se o projeto de
BPO – Business Process Outsourcing – rumo à Índia.
Editores
Conselho Editorial
Rodrigo Lang
Thaissa Lemos
Vanessa Saavedra
Caio Fiuza
Eduardo Saggioro
Vitor Marques
Diagramação
Gabriel Almeida
Contato: pesquisas@institutodegestao.com.br
www.institutodegestao.com.br
5
Shared Services News | Edição 27
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