I'm constantly meeting people that are smarter and more experienced than me - and that talk more better too. Stuart has 27 years experience advising companies on financial strategy and has a terrific grasp of movements in outsourcing below.
by Stuart Lipkin
Published Nov. 25th, 2009 - via B2B CFO
Business as usual? I don't think so - that cliché is just no longer an option. Companies of all sizes have to rethink the way that they do business in order to survive. Through the recessions of 2001 and 2008 and the globalization of the marketplace, countries like India and China are viable resources for more and more goods and services and every company struggles to find ways to reduce costs and continue to maintain market share. As companies demanded reduced pricing from their suppliers gross margins deflate for vendors and pressure increases on operating results. The domino effect is a swift reduction in employees which as we have seen sends the unemployment rates skyrocketing.
So what’s the future?
The future requires many businesses to utilize outside consultants in a more proactive way. It will be a number of months (if not years) before consumer confidence responds and CEO’s will be motivated to add employees (if ever). They will need the services of individuals and firms to perform necessary functions on an outsourced basis, also known as business process outsourcing. Outsourcing will embrace everything from sales professionals (either directly selling or managing the sales force), financial professionals assisting the Company to strategically navigate through difficult times, HR, IT services, Marketing, Operations and more. In fact, it has been widely published that many of the unemployed executives today will be unable to obtain suitable employment and will begin their own businesses, most likely consulting in their field of expertise. The day of having a staff of full-time employees responsible for each of the company’s functions is in the past.
Some of the benefits of outsourcing are:
Steps to take!
The proactive CEO will recognize this shift in the way business is transacted and will begin to build his/her own “power team” of outsourced professionals. This selection process is as important as if they were hiring full-time employees. It needs to address the technical skills, related costs and fees of such services versus in house solutions and costs as well as establish a level of trust and confidence necessary to be aligned with corporate strategic goals.
The initiatives that need to be implemented are:
Prior to the recent string of economic recessions, business owners and CEO’s only had to understand their business and industry in order to be successful. In today’s new world, that alone is not enough. They will need the ability to tap into the expertise of other professionals, in a way that rewards them with cost effective solutions and the ability to be competitive in an aggressive marketplace. Properly utilizing the skill sets and specialized resources of consultants to match the business strategies is the new focus.