Wald W2D1 6635
Focus In to Farm Out Krell, Eric . HRMagazine ; Alexandria Vol. 56, Iss. 7, (Jul 2011): 47-49.
ProQuest document link
ABSTRACT Cost savings drove the human resources outsourcing gold rush of the early 2000s. Today, as many agreements
come up for renewal, saving time trumps saving money for leading practitioners. Saving money is not necessarily
the primary objective at this point, notes Ron Gier, VP of human capital planning and employee relations for Sprint
in Overland Park, KS. Outsourcing is about concentrating where you are going to put your energy, where you are
going to build competency as a company and where you can use a partner to perform activities that are not core to
your business. One of Sprint's top strategic objectives is to provide excellent customer service. To meet that goal,
Gier and his colleagues realized that they needed more time to focus on training, developing and retaining call
center representatives. About three years ago, this need led to the outsourcing of most, but not all, recruiting,
interviewing and onboarding processes for call center representatives. He emphasizes that Sprint's agreements
are made in conjunction with the company's supply chain and contract management functions. FULL TEXT
Headnote
Effective HR outsourcing requires strategically selecting tasks that vendors can do better to allow you to focus on
key functions.
Cost savings drove the human resources outsourcing (HRO) gold rush of the early 2000s. Today, as many
agreements come up for renewal, saving time trumps saving money for leading practitioners.
"Saving money is not necessarily the primary objective at this point," notes Ron Gier, vice president of human
capital planning and employee relations for Sprint in Overland Park, Kan. Outsourcing "is about concentrating
where you are going to put your energy, where you are going to build competency as a company and where you
can use a partner to perform activities that are not core to your business."
Cost remains a key consideration, but it should take a back seat to organizational strategy, according to Gier and
other HR practitioners. These HR professionals, along with HRO advisors and researchers, describe a maturing
market that is becoming better suited to delivering on buyers' desire to focus their decision-making squarely on
value.
"You generally decide to outsource for one of two reasons," says Lou Cimini, vice president of human resources,
the Americas, for Mansfield, Mass.-based Samsonite Corp.-either "to increase the value of your function and
maintain costs" or "to reduce costs and protect your value."
Cimini says outsourcing HR administrative and data management functions allowed him "to free up my high-value
team members to focus more time and energy on addressing strategic organizational issues." For example, Cimini
could support the development of new customer programs and products during open benefits enrollment season-
formerly "a brutal time for HR." HR previously was not involved in such innovation.
Zeroing In
One of Sprint's top strategic objectives is to provide excellent customer service. A related HR function objective is
to train and develop top-notch service representatives in the call centers "as quickly as possible," Gier says.
To meet that goal, Gier and his colleagues realized that they needed more time to focus on training, developing and
retaining call center representatives. About three years ago, this need led to the outsourcing of most, but not all,
recruiting, interviewing and onboarding processes for call center representatives. Gier and his HR colleagues
continue to conduct some call center recruiting to understand this part of the onboarding cycle. By partnering with
a recruiting company, Gier notes, "We are now able to focus much more diligently and effectively on how we can
take our new hires and make them productive."
Sprint's approach illustrates one facet of the maturation of HR outsourcing.
"We see more companies moving toward a 'right-sourcing' model, in which they focus on finding the best providers-
not the best provider-for each HR domain area they are considering outsourcing and then determining if they can
find a provider who fits their needs," reports Glenn Nevill, the Dallasbased North American practice leader for
Towers Watson's HR service delivery practice. HR professionals "then want to make some strategic decisions
around how they source. They are not automatically looking to bundle all of their HR functions with a vendor who
can give them a good price."
Lessons learned during multiprocess, multiyear relationships drive the evolution of this market. Most contracts are
five, seven or 10 years in duration. Peter Ackerson, SPHR, a specialist leader in Deloitte Consulting's HR service
delivery practice, points out that large HRO providers have learned numerous lessons from clients and from
smaller, single-process providers. These insights include the following:
* Service cost, while important, is "just the price of admission."
* Clients want higher-quality service and continuous improvement backed by measurable commitments.
* Buyers want precise yet flexible contracts that support high service levels and quick responses when their needs
change.
Single-process outsourcing arrangements tend to be more easily monitored, Ackerson notes, particularly in their
approaches to customization and expansion of services.
Nevill says vendors define their offerings and services better than they did five years ago, simplifying buyers'
decisions and selection activities. "If you are a large organization and you're looking at outsourcing multiple
processes, there are no more than four or five vendors that you're really going to look at," he notes. "Six to eight
years ago, before a lot of consolidation occurred, there were more than 10 options."
Rajesh Ranjan, New Delhibased research director for outsourcing advisory and research firm Everest Group in
Dallas, has observed a rise in the "componentized approach." Buyers first outsource a few highly transactional
processes, such as payroll, and then outsource more "judgment-intensive" processes such as recruiting or training
and development. This is not to say that large, multiprocess contracts are a relic of the 2000s. Globally,
multiprocess HRO activity- agreements involving three or more HR processes covering 3,000 or more employees-is
projected to increase by 8 percent to 10 percent this year over the 46 new large deals that were signed in 2010,
according to a recent Everest Group study.
More Face Time
Not all agreements in the past decade produced mutually beneficial partnerships. This helps explain why "HR
buyers are becoming more aggressive in researching their options when it's time to renew their outsourcing
agreements," according to Diane Youden, Dallas-based HR transformation leader with PricewaterhouseCoopers.
Applying greater rigor to decisionmaking and selection, she adds, helps ensure that vendors are providing the
value and services that buyers need.
Youden says buyers are focusing on what she describes as "partnership capacity"-the potential for the two
organizations to work together to achieve mutual benefits and address problems and changes. Some buyers run
through scenarios with potential partners in a workshop setting before making final selections.
Before Samsonite's Cimini decided to outsource employee self-service to ADP Inc. in 2010, he took two actions
that he says bolstered his decision-making. First, Samsonite's HR department worked to improve employee
relations and benefits processes that had been disrupted as a result of a previous enterprise software
implementation. "Once we had our processes under control, I could map our performance gaps and I could justify
any differences in cost in hiring an outsourcing provider to handle the processes."
Second, Cimini visited ADP's Augusta, Ga., service center. The purpose of the one-day meeting was to "get to know
the people on the team and who would be answering the phones," Cimini explains. "I also wanted to make sure that
they had a learning environment down there. If one person on their team asked us a question or escalated an issue
to me, I wanted to make sure that everybody on their team would learn from it."
The face time helped lay the groundwork for a partnership. "You want to treat your outsourcing group as a partner,
and you cannot run away from your responsibilities in that partnership," Cimini says.
Cost and Time Savings
More HR professionals could achieve HRO happiness by focusing more on value and less on cost, notes Charlotte
Anderson, SPHR, GPHR, managing director of Amethyst and Iris, a consulting firm in Hillsborough, N.J.
"Within companies that view HR service delivery as a commodity," Anderson observes, "HR outsourcing decisions
are almost entirely related to costs."
In the past, Gier agrees, "HR outsourcing was really all about finding an activity that existed within your group that
you could give to somebody else and get a cost savings." Today, Sprint's HR leaders prefer to "decide where we
want to go from a strategy perspective and then seek out partnerships if they can help us get there," Gier says.
"This is where a lot of companies got caught up-somebody comes in and portrays a significant savings that you
can't ignore, but you really have not figured out how it is going to help you accomplish your core objectives."
He emphasizes that Sprint's agreements are made in conjunction with the company's supply chain and contract
management functions. Their input helps ensure that most partnerships generate a positive financial return, Gier
says. In other words, cost savings mark a secondary outcome.
"Besides the basic dollars and cents, how will the organization benefit?" asks Richard Oyen, SPHR, vice president
of human resources for SumTotal Systems in Mountain View, Calif. If an outsourcing agency does your recruiting,
"will they understand the business needs and manager preferences enough to continually send good candidates?"
When outsourcing HR operations and information systems data, "will a call center give your employees the 'touch'
your employees need to feel that their issues and questions are being properly addressed?"
These types of strategic questions are factors that Youden says HR executives should weigh in decision-making.
Specifically, she suggests that HR leaders determine whether outsourcing can help "ensure that the HR function is
better positioned to provide the business with the organizational capabilities it will need to deliver against its
strategic initiatives."
That approach defines how Sprint tackled another strategic objective: improving employee wellness to hike overall
business performance and reduce employee medical costs. HR leaders decided that the best use of resources
would not involve running a wellness facility, but understanding, identifying and nurturing strong links between
specific wellness programs and bottom-line measures such as medical costs, employee engagement and
employee productivity. They decided to outsource the staffing of a new on-site health care facility and the
administration of wellness programs.
"We did not want to hire doctors, nurses and pharmacists," Gier explains. "We really wanted to concentrate on how
[wellness programs] improve the health of our people [and] the performance of our organization, and reduce time
away from work. That's where we put our energy."
Sidebar
Online Resources
For more information on current trends and data about outsourcing, see the online version of this article at www
.shrm.org/hrmagazine/0711Outsourcing Agenda.
Buyers want precise yet flexible contracts that support high service levels and quick responses when their needs
change.
AuthorAffiliation
The author is a business writer based in Austin, Texas, who covers human resource and finance issues.
DETAILS
Subject: Call centers; Customer services; Human resources; Cost control; Human resource
management; Employees; Outsourcing; Agreements; Decision making
Business indexing term: Subject: Customer services Human resources Cost control Human resource
management Employees Outsourcing; Industry: 56142 : Telephone Call Centers
Location: United States--US
Classification: 9190: United States; 6100: Human resource planning; 5120: Purchasing; 2400: Public
relations; 56142: Telephone Call Centers
Publication title: HRMagazine; Alexandria
LINKS Linking Service
Volume: 56
Issue: 7
Pages: 47-49
Number of pages: 3
Publication year: 2011
Publication date: Jul 2011
Section: Outsourcing Agenda
Publisher: Society for Human Resource Management
Place of publication: Alexandria
Country of publication: United States, Alexandria
Publication subject: Business And Economics--Management
ISSN: 10473149
Source type: Trade Journal
Language of publication: English
Document type: Feature
Document feature: Illustrations; Tables
ProQuest document ID: 883589327
Document URL: https://www.proquest.com/trade-journals/focus-farm-out/docview/883589327/se-
2?accountid=14872
Copyright: Reprinted with the permission of Society for Human Resource Management
(www.shrm.org), Alexandria, VA.
Last updated: 2021-09-09
Database: ProQuest One Academic
Database copyright 2022 ProQuest LLC. All rights reserved. Terms and Conditions Contact ProQuest
- Focus In to Farm Out