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An evolution is happening in IT outsourcing

Companies are now looking for providers that are partners in their transformation journey
Software Programmer Working

IT out­sourc­ing is chang­ing fast. The era when out­sourced IT was syn­ony­mous with dis­tant, cheap­ly run helpdesks is end­ing as firms seek new, part­ner­ship-based mod­els that help them with their dig­i­tal trans­for­ma­tion jour­ney. Out­sourc­ing is also help­ing com­pa­nies with one of their most press­ing IT challenges—skills short­ages.

“Out­sourc­ing is impor­tant because it allows cus­tomers to focus on their core busi­ness” says Niko­lai Laković, UK man­ag­ing direc­tor of ser­vice provider Getron­ics. “Lever­ag­ing a ser­vice part­ner like Getron­ics enables clients to ben­e­fit from deep knowl­edge, spe­cial­ist skills and the capa­bil­i­ty to build an effec­tive dig­i­tal future.

To under­stand this pro­found change, it helps to look at how IT out­sourc­ing has evolved in the UK and beyond. One of the first com­pa­nies to out­source their tech oper­a­tions was East­man Kodak, which in 1989 was still con­sid­ered one of the world’s most inno­v­a­tive com­pa­nies. The company’s CIO, Kather­ine Hud­son, had a nov­el idea: the pho­tog­ra­phy giant no longer need­ed its size­able IT estate, so decid­ed to out­source most of it. This trig­gered an explo­sion in out­sourc­ing for basic tech­nol­o­gy func­tions such as helpdesk, device man­age­ment and net­work ops.

But the orig­i­nal insights behind IT out­sourc­ing got dilut­ed. Instead of being seen as a way of lib­er­at­ing com­pa­nies to focus on their core busi­ness, it became syn­ony­mous with cost-cut­ting. Com­pa­nies drew up a ser­vice-lev­el agree­ment for var­i­ous IT func­tions and con­tract­ed with whomev­er promised the low­est price.

Fast-for­ward to 2023, how­ev­er, and at last, IT out­sourc­ing is ful­fill­ing its true poten­tial. The most pro­gres­sive firms in IT out­sourc­ing such as Getron­ics are no longer just there to sluice away jobs, but are help­ing busi­ness­es build and sup­port bet­ter tech­nol­o­gy plat­forms quick­ly, so com­pa­nies can focus on their core com­pe­ten­cies while enjoy­ing the ben­e­fits of cut­ting-edge tech­nolo­gies like AI and the inter­net of things.

Many com­pa­nies see the busi­ness need for these new tech­nolo­gies but can strug­gle to deploy them using in-house tal­ents. They also strug­gle in oth­er key areas, such as cyber­se­cu­ri­ty. But IT spe­cial­ists that offer out­sourced ser­vices have the crit­i­cal mass to attract and retain talent—and keep their skills up-to-date.

Oper­at­ing in a very shaky macro­eco­nom­ic envi­ron­ment, CIOs increas­ing­ly recog­nise the need to re-eval­u­ate their IT strate­gies in sup­port of the busi­ness goals. They need to focus on build­ing resilient, secure, respon­sive and agile ser­vices, but they are also under tremen­dous pres­sure to deliv­er those ser­vices with high­ly con­strained bud­gets.

Clients are now select­ing providers based on their core strengths and how they will address their spe­cif­ic ser­vice require­ments

“Nine out of 10 organ­i­sa­tions are build­ing plat­forms for con­sump­tion whether that’s inter­nal­ly or exter­nal­ly,” com­ments Laković. “They’re build­ing plat­forms that they can lever­age and scale up and down to cope with eco­nom­ic changes—and that’s what our cus­tomers are look­ing for: flex­i­ble oper­at­ing mod­els they can basi­cal­ly build on, get ser­vices and con­sume them. They don’t have to make mas­sive ongo­ing invest­ments to reap the rewards.”

And there’s a whole host of unseen, com­plex prob­lems around peo­ple and process­es in order to deliv­er these dig­i­tal tech­nolo­gies. So per­haps that’s why a blend­ed out­sourc­ing mod­el is becom­ing an increas­ing­ly attrac­tive option for busi­ness­es that want to focus on what they’re good at.

In the same way that the biggest hyper­scale cloud providers offer flex­i­bil­i­ty and scal­a­bil­i­ty around run­ning infra­struc­ture, out­sourc­ing can pro­vide the same kinds of ben­e­fits for skills where an organ­i­sa­tion may be lack­ing inter­nal exper­tise.

This is reflect­ed in the chang­ing tasks being han­dled by out­sourcers. For exam­ple, instead of ‘just’ run­ning a help desk, they are now more like­ly to be also help­ing with busi­ness-crit­i­cal func­tions, such as appli­ca­tion devel­op­ment.

Laković says: “We’re see­ing clients mov­ing away from those mono­lith­ic out­sourc­ing mod­els because they clear­ly haven’t worked or deliv­ered the val­ue that they were seek­ing. Clients are now select­ing solu­tions based on how they will address their spe­cif­ic ser­vice require­ments.”

“We have the capa­bil­i­ty to con­sult and deliv­er val­ue, both from with­in Getron­ics’ com­pre­hen­sive port­fo­lio of capa­bil­i­ties and from our part­ners, for instance Azure or AWS, or from a glob­al prod­uct sup­pli­er, where all ser­vices are man­aged by us.”

This new think­ing is also chang­ing how ser­vices are pro­cured. In the past, busi­ness­es approached out­sourcers chiefly to cut costs, but this led to some­thing like a price war among the biggest of them. Prices were dri­ven down so much that cus­tomers got thread­bare prod­ucts, and busi­ness val­ue wasn’t being deliv­ered on top of it. Out­sourcers on wafer-thin mar­gins had no incen­tive or capac­i­ty to help clients meet broad­er busi­ness goals.

“If you are nego­ti­at­ed down to the low­est pos­si­ble price, you’re very restrict­ed [in what you can do],” says Laković. In con­trast, he says, the new approach to out­sourc­ing focus­es on cus­tomer expe­ri­ence and busi­ness out­comes. “It’s going to be less and less about the ser­vice lev­el, more about the expe­ri­ence mod­el and val­ue you can bring.”

Instead of the out­sourced staff being in dis­tant loca­tions with the cheap­est labour costs, Getron­ics is see­ing increas­ing demand for blend­ed onshore and near-shore staffing mod­els that can pro­vide high-qual­i­ty, flex­i­ble ser­vices, vis­it­ing a client in per­son to get full
under­stand­ing of their busi­ness and their dig­i­tal require­ments.

This all adds up to a con­sid­er­able shift in the IT out­sourc­ing mod­el, with busi­ness­es increas­ing­ly look­ing for part­ner­ships focused on val­ue rather than just the price point alone. They want more of a part­ner­ship where the experts with those elu­sive skills, the oper­a­tional agili­ty and the abil­i­ty to scale are on hand to be con­sult­ed with and to help steer strat­e­gy. Busi­ness­es want advice and dia­logue, not a ser­vice provider that deliv­ers nar­row­ly to the let­ter of the con­tract and noth­ing more.

Out­sourc­ing is also the pre­ferred option for the end-to-end appli­ca­tion devel­op­ment process, where providers like Getron­ics can pro­vide instant access to expert tal­ent and skills and give them the flex­i­bil­i­ty, agili­ty and speed to mar­ket they need, notes Lau­rence Kres­nyak, busi­ness devel­op­ment direc­tor of Getron­ics UK.

Laković sum­maris­es: “For over 130 years, Getron­ics has been guid­ing and sup­port­ing cus­tomers through the ever-chang­ing use of tech­nol­o­gy. Today, Getron­ics still main­tains that strong cus­tomer con­nec­tion, help­ing busi­ness­es through their own trans­for­ma­tion jour­neys by lever­ag­ing our secure-by-design port­fo­lio. Hav­ing the capa­bil­i­ty to deliv­er glob­al­ly, but being agile enough to respond flex­i­bly to the chang­ing needs of busi­ness­es is not just a strength, but a core com­pa­ny val­ue.”

For more infor­ma­tion vis­it getronics.com