Author Topic: Outsourcing flops blamed on tunnel vision  (Read 138 times)

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Outsourcing flops blamed on tunnel vision
« on: July 07, 2005, 10:44:03 am »
Outsourcing flops blamed on tunnel vision
 
By Andy McCue, Silicon.com
Published on ZDNet News: June 22, 2005, 12:21 PM PT

 
 
Hidden costs, high staff turnover and poor cross-cultural communications are the key causes of offshore outsourcing failures, according to new research from analyst house Gartner.

The analyst report predicts global spending on offshore outsourcing services will top $50 billion by 2007 but it warns too many companies are rushing into deals on the promise of unrealistic cost savings.

The biggest mistake that is common to all offshore outsourcing failures is to base the business case solely on reduced labor costs.

 

"Many hidden costs--including expenses associated with infrastructure, due diligence, communications, governance, overseas travel and cultural training--will offset the cost advantage of wage differentiation," the report said.

Organizations are also warned that a disproportionate amount of costs are incurred during the planning and start-up stages and that any savings will take longer to materialize.

"As a result, long-term offshore deals do not realize the projected savings until the 'steady state' stage 12 to 24 months into the engagement. For the same reasons, short-term offshore deals lasting less than one year are unlikely to realize any cost savings," the report said.

The high turnover of offshore staff, particularly in countries such as India, also has a negative impact on productivity.

"Such turnover contributes to productivity loss because new staff must be trained and overcome the learning curve for dealing with customer applications and relationships," said Gartner.

Poor communication between the onsite and offshore project teams as well as between management and employees is also picked out by Gartner as a critical failure factor.

"Effective communications are critical in offshore outsourcing projects. The reason many offshore deals fail is because of the propagation of misinformation and confusion due to inadequate communications among the project team and its contacts, as well as within the general employee population, executive ranks and local community," the report said.
 

msn.com.com/2100-9589_22-...ag=tg_itdc



codger

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Re: Outsourcing flops blamed on tunnel vision
« Reply #1 on: July 07, 2005, 04:47:01 pm »
Silly me. I've always thought that stupid soft skills were useless. Unimportant. Not priceless, like coding.

I guess it might be possible for a project or a business relationship to fall apart because people don't know how to communicate.

Myself? I always have my technical lead do all of the strategy and communicating for a project :rollin :rollin :rollin :rollin :rollin

The Original Dinosaur

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Re: Outsourcing flops blamed on tunnel vision
« Reply #2 on: July 07, 2005, 05:29:52 pm »
Mangagement consists of gettting the lowest possible dollar value for each and every cost (except management salaries and perks), the highest possible for revenues.  Don't it? :rollin

Aussie

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Re: Outsourcing flops blamed on tunnel vision
« Reply #3 on: July 08, 2005, 03:24:53 am »
And they charged how much for this report ?

And it took them how long to figure out that outsourcing is less the light on the hill than the shadows beneath ?

Remember McGeezer, my old Project Manager?  He had a very low opinion of companies that charged 'good brass for old news'.  When someone floated the idea of buying a research report out of his budget on ..... I think it was obvious Y2K stuff ..... he threatened to 'have their guts for Gartners'.


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