Skip Links

Network World

  • Social Web 
  • Email 
  • Close

(Comma separation for multiple addresses)
Your Message:

Is the economy impacting outsourcing relationships

By Kathleen Lau, Computerworld Canada
January 12, 2009 02:30 PM ET
  • Share/Email
  • Tweet This
  • Comment
  • Print

While there are opportunities in outsourcing and offshoring to businesses under pressure to cut costs and stretch slimmed-down budgets, that opportunity is accompanied by an additional level of complexity, said a PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP executive.

In the IT world, especially, outsourcing and offshoring models have become extremely mature with time, said Madhav Murti, a vice-president specializing in offshoring and outsourcing advisory services with the Toronto-based professional services firm. But in tough economic times, he said, new complexities like service provider viability must be considered when implementing these models because "now the level of risk has gone up so much."

"What is happening is, any company looking at an outsourcing relationship is dealing with a provider environment which is extremely volatile," said Murti, listing diminished business, access to credit, and stock market pressures as factors brought on by the weak economy.

Given those various impacts, businesses considering a new outsourcing relationship should first evaluate the service provider, said Murti, given "the diligence of the service provider goes up probably fivefold because you can no longer just look at their financial viability."

But on the positive side, there is an opportunity for companies who have previously only dabbled in outsourcing pilot projects to expand the scale and scope of the work, said Murti. "It's becoming a buyer's market again because service providers are hungry for business...so your ability to get their attention...is high."

Murti said new locations for outsourcing and offshoring are presenting themselves as currency volatility has weakened traditional destinations like India and Mexico. Depending on the scale and scope of work, he said, businesses may be able to start discussions about outsourcing to more attractive locations like some South American countries.

As for those companies already outsourcing part of their infrastructure, Murti suggested revisiting the relationship to ensure business continuity and that the service provider remains able to meet all the business' expectations and commercial obligations originally outlined.

Moreover, understanding the service provider's relationships with other clients is important, said Murti. "This is a new complexity because typically you would not go beyond your own relationship with the service provider," he said. "But now you need to understand their exposure to other clients and how that may impact how they end up servicing you."

If a company's business requirements or strategy has changed, then the scope, scale, terms and focus of the relationship may need altering, he said. And, in the event the service provider arrangements are unable to support changing business focus, and the relationship is to be terminated or renegotiated, Murti said a business should review and understand its contractual obligations and rights.

John Simke, chairman of the board of directors with Toronto-based Centre for Outsourcing Research & Education (CORE), said that while 12-18 months ago businesses in richer countries like Canada and the U.S. may not have welcomed the hassle of outsourcing, they are now certainly considering it as a means to cut costs.

  • Share/Email
  • Tweet This
  • Comment
  • Print

Partner Content

VOIP OPTIMIZATION

Optimize and assure the delivery of Voice over IP services with a superior packet based management platform that delivers unified views and analysis of voice, video and data traffic.

Download Technical Note

VIRTUALIZATION SIMPLIFIED

Industry analyst Jim Metzler helps identify how to overcome the challenges of managing virtualized server environments in this in-depth whitepaper.

Download the Whitepaper

Managing Modern IP Networks

Industry expert Nate Kalowski discusses the best practice approach of a Performance Assurance Layer (PAL), built in an ITIL framework, as a means to speed problem resolution and enable high quality QoS.

Download the Whitepaper

Comments (1)
Login
Forgot your account info?

To Murti: NO SH*T SHERLOCK!By Anonymous on February 8, 2009, 6:27 pmWhat Murti Says can be guessed by any idiot. You do not need a Big Six "I am full of it" exec to tell us that while outcourcing one should consider vendor viability....

Reply | Read entire comment

View all comments

Add comment
Anonymous comments subject to approval. Register here for member benefits.
Have a NetworkWorld account? Log in here. Register now for a free account.

Videos

rssRss Feed