Some of the primary challenges of sourcing include understanding and accurately formulating your organization’s requirements, achieving organizational alignment, crafting a rigorous contract, benchmarking the costs and quality of SLAs against the market, negotiating with providers to achieve a competitive deal, and ensuring a successful transition of services.
Another key challenge to overcome when conducting a major transaction is managing organizational change. A programmatic organizational change management approach that focuses on preparing affected employees for the Future Mode of Operations and road maps is necessary to successfully transition to a new provider. As outsourcing impacts the retained (IT) organization, adaptations need to be made to the organization and affected processes. Neglecting the human elements of change and training are often the biggest source of failure post-sourcing engagement.
In addition, a powerful provider governance function should be established to manage the contract with the provider(s). This is to ensure that service levels and Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) are met, and the organization receives the benefits as outlined in the contract.
It's also critical during the sourcing process that due diligence is addressed, and a plan is created for managing provider risk, which includes the reliability, financial stability, cybersecurity and ethical practices of providers. Global sourcing in particular introduces complexities such as time zone issues, language barriers, cultural differences and logistical issues (e.g. customs) that can impact delivery times and cost efficiency. The increasing reliance on technology requires continuous investment in digital tools and cybersecurity measures to safeguard sensitive business information and maintain seamless operations.
Contact us to learn more about our ISG FutureSource™ methodology, which addresses all aspects of the sourcing process.