What Is Outsourcing: Outsourcing Means Finding Better Ways of Doing Business
What Is Outsourcing: Outsourcing Means Finding Better Ways of Doing Business
Control
Internal Internal
Insourced
Domestic Offshoring
Supply (Internal cross-border supply)
(USD 22 billion)
National International
Location
Source: 2004 OECD Information Technology Outlook,
Chapter 2
International (services) sourcing
• The phenomenon is not new: has existed
in manufacturing for many years
• What is new: it is increasingly taking place
in the services sector (enabled by ICTs)
and affects white collar jobs previously
considered ‘untouchable’
• Occurs in response to:
– Increased competition, resulting from trade
liberalisation and reinforced pressures to cut
costs, combined with rapid technological
change, making services increasingly
tradable
– Skills shortages ensuring a skills base is in
place increasingly becomes a locational
determinant of economic activity
Measurement issue
• If outsourcing is concerned with activities
that were previously carried out within
the firm, “When does outsourcing stop
being outsourcing?”
• This means it will be very difficult to
collect data measuring the extent of the
phenomenon
•
No official statistics measuring the
extent of (services) sourcing
Look at indirect
measuresk
• Exports of services (Information
Technology Outlook, Chapter 2)
Ø if service activities are sourced internationally,
the country receiving the international in-
and/or outsourcing must export services back
to the country of origin
• Employment data: (Information
Technology Outlook Chapter 6 and
ongoing work on ICT skills and
employment)
Ø occupations that use ICTs intensively could be
more exposed or vulnerable to offshoring
trends:
Export data show
• Some of the countries often mentioned in
the outsourcing debate have experienced
strong export growth (e.g. India, Romania,
Estonia, Ireland).
• But, the exports of most of these countries
are growing from a low base (only India
and Ireland are among the 10 countries
with the strongest growth rates and the
largest shares):
Share of reported total exports of other business
services and computer and information services,
2002, 2008 (IMF BoP data)
2002 2008
18
16
14 15 largest reported value shares in 2002 selected
12 other
10
8
6
4
2
0
Sweden
Japan
Singapore
Germany
Italy
France
Austria
Spain
Canada
China
Korea
Australia
United States
Ireland
Brazil
Thailand
Finland
United Kingdom
Netherlands
India
4.0 22.0
21.5
3.5
21.0
3.0
20.5
2.5
20.0
2.0 19.5
1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
1 2 5 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 40 41 45 50 51 52 55 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 70 71 72 73 74 75 80 85 90 91 92 93 95 99
21
Global Sourcing
Arrangements
• Arrangement that provide a firm with
foreign products
– Wholly owned subsidiary
– Overseas joint venture
– In-bond plant contractor
– Overseas independent contractor
– Independent overseas manufacturer
22
Global Sourcing
• Problems
23
Added Costs
• International freight, insurance and
packing
• Import duties
• Customhouse broker’s fees
• Transit or pipeline inventory
• Cost of letter of credit
• International travel and communication
costs
• Company import specialists
• Reworking of products out of specification
24
Standards for Global
Operations
• Standards
– Documented agreements on technical
specifications or other precise
criteria used consistently as
guidelines, rules, or definitions of
the characteristics of a product,
process, or service
• ISO 9000 (International Organization for
Standards) most used in Europe, for
quality
• ISO 9001 most comprehensive standard 25
POSITIVE ASPECTS
• COSTS + EFFICIENCY
• – Lower overall cost
• – Lower labour cost
• – Lower land and facility costs
• – Lower taxes
• – Greater standardisation
POSITIVE ASPECTS
• STRATEGIC
• – Penetration of growth markets
• – Introduce competition between
• suppliers
• – Improve environmental
• compliance
POSITIVE ASPECTS
• VALUE
• – Improved quality
• – Improved delivery reliability
• – Improved new product
• introduction
• – Improved sharing of information
• – Uniqueness
NEGATIVES
• STRATEGIC
• – Loss of Knowledge
• – Piracy / Abuse of IPR
• – Unknown long term impact on
• demand / supply
• – Language, cultural and time
NEGATIVES
• VALUE
• – Quality problems
• – Lower responsiveness
• • ENVIRONMENT AND CSR
• – Longer distances (effects on
• pollution and congestion)
• – Abuse of the environment
• – Abuse of employees
• – Loss of jobs
RISKS
• SUPPLY RISK
• – Supply disruptions
• – Longer lead-times
• – Lower responsiveness
• – Quality problems
• • PROCESS RISK
• – Communication problems
• – Quality problems postmanufacture
• • DEMAND RISK
• – Indirect effects on corporate
• social responsibly can affect demand
RISKS
• ENVIROMENTAL RISK
• – Natural disasters
• – Terrorism
• – Global pandemic
• – Strikes and demonstrations
• – Currency fluctuations
• – Travel longer distances (effects
• on pollution and congestion)
• • CONTROL RISK
• – Loss of knowledge
• – Piracy / abuse of IPR
The future shape of business is
being redefined through outsourcing
What to Outsource
• CRM (Customer Relationship Management)
• SCM (Supply Chain Management)
• Back Office
– Payroll
– Billing
– Accounting
– Investor Relationship Management – Share
Transfer & Fixed Deposit Accounting
Why Outsource
• Use the specialised services and
skills of the Outsourcing partner
• Better utilise internal resources
• Increased responsiveness to
customer needs
• Decrease financial risks by reducing
capital investments
Motivators for Outsourcing
The followings are the major reasons
given for taking outsourcing decisions