2014 shared services and outsourcing outlook Part II: Why GBS will not be bullsh*t

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Ready for your next provider meeting?

If I had a dollar for every person who enlightened me with the news that Global Business Services (GBS) is BS, I could purchase about three hours of offshore help desk support.

However, while several folks make valid arguments why GBS may be a pipe-dream for their own organizations (or some of their clients’ organizations), I believe they are missing the big picture.

GBS is about laying the foundations to achieve much more value than the modest benefits of labor arbitrage and process standardization

The crux of the matter is that when it comes to achieving business outcomes, enterprises need to focus on the “what”, but can’t do that until they have some capability with the “how”.  Many of the GBS cynics are stuck in a world where they will forever be trying to master the “how” and settling for achieving the modest benefits of some labor arbitrage savings and process standardization.

In my view, GBS is only BS if you can’t make the Six Maturity Leaps we discussed during Part I, where ambitious enterprises must lay the groundwork to shift from siloed, immature shared services and outsourcing to effective, commercially-oriented Global Business Services:

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Simply put, today’s ambitious enterprises can’t really focus on achieving their desired outcomes (the “what”) until they have the operations framework in place that gives them the control and culture to make genuine advances with their operations performance (the “how”).

In short, there are limitations to the value you can achieve by finding a few more bodies that can be displaced to lower-cost locations and standardizing processes with some better workflows and technology.  Most ambitious governance executives already know that only focusing on transactional processing and lower costs will fail to reap the long-term, continuous incremental results their leadership demands (or will start to demand when they  see the results of peer enterprises).  In short, there is a ceiling to achieving outcomes if you can’t make the Six Leaps.

Business outcomes don’t change with GBS, it’s the desire and capability to achieve them that does

Let’s examine further by comparing the desired business outcomes of enterprises with their level of operational maturity, where we divided up the maturity levels of 343 major enterprises into four percentiles, based on the Six Leaps described above:

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As the data clearly illustrates, the desired business outcomes of enterprises’ shared services and outsourcing initiatives are pretty much the same as their operations become more mature. However, there is a clear jump in focus as enterprises approach the top quartile for maturity – which represents those enterprises which most closely fit the GBS framework.

Suddenly, the desire to drive out cost, improve their quality of data is critical to more than 60% of enterprises, as opposed to much lower proportions of less mature enterprises. Similarly, in terms of developing talent, increasing control over end-to-end processes, improving collaboration with service provider staff and achieving innovations to to processes, the impetuses are double that of the less mature enterprises across each category.

Desire to achieve outcomes is directly linked to maturity of operations and performance

So it’s one thing to aspire the achievement of certain outcomes, but is this desire linked to actual performance?  Let’s investigate further:

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As the data plainly points out, strong performance against outcomes increases markedly with maturity levels of operations. However, what is also apparent is there is a real “leap” forward when enterprises enter the highest quartile for maturity. It’s as if they took a running jump and now they are on the other side of the chasm, they have hit the ground running.

Why do I dismiss the GBS naysayers?  Because even in the relatively “tactical” areas of cost reduction, capability and standardization, the top quartile massively outperforms.  However, the gaps in performance are even more pronounced between the top quartile and the rest of the pack when it comes to more strategic measures, such as staff accountability, greater provider collaboration, improved data quality, talent alignment with corporate objectives and innovation.

The Bottom-line: GBS is about making breakthrough changes to operational maturity, and those on the train are already reaping significant benefits

One of the problems with GBS is that too many people simply don’t understand it, and many who do are threatened by it.  It’s about closing the book on the legacy practices of managing providers with punitive and contractual measures, on persisting with dysfunctional, poor quality shared services, on tolerating siloed uncollaborative business units. Asking a monolithic vendor manager to jump on the GBS bandwagon is akin to asking a demolition expert to start building houses. Suddenly they need to think about producing an end product from their work that has long-term meaning and value to their clients, as opposed to meeting simple targets devoid of a long term game-plan.

It’s about the governance function becoming the consultative, value-add capability that does the basics really well, such as running transactional processes efficiently at low cost, but also contributing the higher-value services the organization needs, namely providing better quality operational data, continuous improvements to processes and operations, getting the best out of the third party outsourcers, and so on.

If you’re stuck in those lower two quartiles for maturity, how long will it be before your leadership decides to eliminate much of your inhouse operations altogether?  I would agree that GBS is BS to many organizations which couldn’t even conceive of achieving anything near the performance levels of the high achievers with their current operational leadership and infrastructure. In some cases, they may be better off outsourcing as much as they can now, and then rebuilding their internal competencies with a new governance team that can apply analytical thinking and real value to their organization.  Or they may simply not care and will limp along hauling around a hulking great inefficient back office, if they can somehow get away with it and still survive.

However which way we look at this, moving to the top quartile is a long, arduous journey for many enterprises, and one that will require a five, or even ten, year roadmap – even in today’s fast-moving environment.  But, what is clear, is that successful enterprises have to divorce themselves from the inertia and monolithic habits of managing failing outsourcing relationships and immature operations, and look to develop a governance function that can call itself part of the business, not a cost center.  Let’s hope 2014 will be the year that many enterprises can genuinely make this distinction…

Readers can also access our complimentary new report, “The Global Business Services Industry Study“,  produced in conjunction with KPMG LLP, where we interviewed 416 enterprises across a cross section of regions and industries about their GBS activities, priorities, drivers, constraints, and plans.  

Posted in : Business Process Outsourcing (BPO), Captives and Shared Services Strategies, GBS 2013 Study, Global Business Services, HfSResearch.com Homepage, HR Strategy, IT Outsourcing / IT Services, kpo-analytics, smac-and-big-data, Sourcing Best Practises, Sourcing Locations, sourcing-change, Talent in Sourcing, the-industry-speaks

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  1. 2014 shared services and outsourcing outlook Part I: It’s time for enterprises to stop being really good at irrelevant stu says:

    […] tuned for Part II of our 2014 outlook, we will analyze the performance of enterprises against their desired business outcomes, based on […]

  2. […] Horses for Sources 2014 shared services and outsourcing outlook Part II: Why GBS will not be bullsh*t Horses for Sources As the data clearly illustrates, the desired business outcomes of enterprises' shared services and outsourcing initiatives are…  […]

  3. Excellent analysis. What struck me as unique here is the fact that the focus on outcomes really picks up with the GBS organizations. It seems that the more companies invest in a mature operations model, the more they can align the business goals with the operations strategy.

    George Cairns

  4. “Asking a monolithic vendor manager to jump on the GBS bandwagon is akin to asking a demolition expert to start building houses”

    That’s the quote of the year, Phil!

  5. Phil- great insights but in my personal opinion the biggest challenge is once again ‘change management and transition from bad habits of tactical measures to more strategic initiative like GBS.’ Continuous education and step-by-step planning process from you might help a few more organizations towards higher adoption rates of GBS…..Yogi

  6. @Yogi – we’re in the business of trying to help companies break from their bad habits! If only it were as easy as giving them a step-by-step guide…

    PF

  7. […] While several folks make valid arguments why GBS may be a pipe-dream for their own organization (or some of their clients' organizations), we believe they are missing the big picture  […]

  8. 2014 shared services and outsourcing outlook Part II: Why GBS will not be bullsh*t - Enterprise Irregulars says:

    […] (Cross-posted @ Horses for Sources) […]

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