Thursday 28 October 2010

The hidden dangers of outsourcing

Outsourcing is one of those words that have become hideously fashionable in corporate lingo in the last 5 to 10 years. A business cynic – which obviously I am not! – might conjecture that perhaps it is popular because it appeals to some fundamental human desires for shirking and procrastination, finally telling managers “to stop doing certain stuff” rather than always pushing them “to do more”. I, as a more thoughtful business observer, on the contrary, think that outsourcing often makes sense, simply because you cannot, and should not try to do everything yourself. Other companies can sometimes do a particular thing better and more efficiently than you, if alone because they can bundle and specialise in it, and then you’re better off buying it from them.

Some companies take it a bit far though… Some time ago I was talking to a senior executive of a major airline and they actually had the idea that in the future they might be able to get rid of all their staff, facilities, pilots, planes, and so forth, and concentrate on “being the director of the chain”; that is, not actually do anything but tie together all the activities conducted by others. Hence, outsource everything accept for the coordination between all the parts. Well… here is my opinion: You can forget about that. Try that, and it won’t be long before nobody needs you anymore.

The classic example of that is IBM’s PC in the 1980s. It was IBM’s plan to outsource everything, add its brand name and just one little microchip connecting all the PC’s ingredients. They outsourced the PC’s microprocessors to some geeky guys who owned one of those founded-in-a-garage little companies in Palo Alto (the little company’s name was Intel) and the operating system to yet another geeky guy with big glasses heading a founded-in-a-garage little company in Seattle (the geeky guy’s name was Billy Gates), in the process provoking the genesis of the most powerful alliance the world of business has ever witnessed: Wintel (Windows and Intel).

Because following in IBM’s footsteps towards Palo Alto and Seattle were all the other computer manufacturers which copied the PC; hence buying their microprocessors from Intel and their operating system from Microsoft. And not for long, Intel, Microsoft and end users alike could not quite remember why they needed IBM in the first place and completely “disintermediated” them. It were Intel and Microsoft that reaped the great big benefits of the booming computer market and not grandfather Big Blue IBM, which ended up in a severe crisis as a result of it.

Hence, be careful with outsourcing; giving up control might get you more than you bargained for (especially if it concerns geeky guys in a garage).


2 comments:

Elco Jol said...

Dear Mr. Vermeulen,

Very interesting topic! Despite the inconsistant reasoning of the senior executive, I can still understand why he made such a remark in the first place.

Isn't it so that the business environment is becoming continiously more dynamic? - Where future gains can be found in making organizations more flexible and adaptive to the environment.

The most flexibility can be reached by outsourcing everything while the least flexibility can be reached with outsourcing nothing. With our changing dynamic business environment, how can we find the right balance?

Regards,

Elco Jol

elcojol.com

vlade said...

First - very glad you're posting again!

Re outsourcing, I believe the main problem is that people do not understand how parts of their companies work together - how they are coupled. You can outsource what is loosely coupled. Tightly coupled can't be outsourced.
The problem is that the level of coupling is often very hard to determine until one actually tries.

Information flows are especially problematic, because they often involve informal channels that would simply cease to exist in decoupling.

I believe that trying to decouple information rich systems where the information is not well understood/specified means outsourcing will be more expensive than keeping it in house. Your patent example from a latter post is a good one for this too, as the by-product (understanding the competitors) is probably not a formal part of the process.

BTW, on what the executive suggested - there may be value in being able to orchestrate, but it has to be a dynamic system ala supply chain (say Li&Fung seems to be good at this). So I could see a virtual airline where you'd be effectively a broker between plane-operators and people wanting to fly. Not sure how much value one could capture there though.