Related Expertise: テクノロジー機能, デジタル/テクノロジー/データ
By Heiner Himmelreich, Hrishi Hrishikesh, Ilan Oshri, and Evelien Scherp
The COVID-19 pandemic has changed many priorities and created a new reality in its wake, but it hasn’t altered the need to deploy smart outsourcing strategies. If anything, the past 12 months have underscored how critical it is for companies to effectively manage IT service providers—those that offer digital capabilities and business process services—in order to survive a crisis and, at the same time, transform to lead in the aftermath.
Moreover, the crisis has reinforced companies’ symbiotic relationships with their service providers. That’s evident from a survey that BCG conducted in the last quarter of 2020. We found that companies will continue to depend on service providers even though they will also invest more in developing in-house capabilities.
The results also reflect the state of companies’ digital transformations. Contrary to the popular notion that businesses sustained all their digital transformation projects last year, the survey shows that many companies were selective about which ones they pursued. And while 76% of respondents expect to slow down some transformation initiatives during the next 24 months, 96% expect to accelerate the execution of some transformation projects.
In this article, we shine a light on these findings and their implications for the future.
All through 2020, as the pandemic raged and governments around the world were forced to impose, and then reimpose, national lockdowns, the world’s economies were paralyzed. To understand the impact of the COVID-19 crisis on outsourcing, BCG conducted a survey of 200 global companies with large IT and business-process outsourcing footprints. (See “About the Survey.”) We found that 82% of the respondents saw revenues fall, 78% faced operational challenges, and 68% had to cope with service provider-related challenges.
Many companies realized that they had no option but to become more digital more quickly if they were to survive, but only those that could facilitate remote work on short notice were able to limit the impact of the pandemic on their operations. In addition to ensuring that employees working from home could operate critical business processes, such as order to cash, adroit companies shifted to online marketing, selling, and services delivery for the foreseeable future.
Finding it difficult to manage these forced digital transitions on the fly, many companies turned to their service providers for support then and have been expanding their relationships with them. “We are deepening our relationships with the [service providers] that saw us through [the initial crisis],” said a CIO of a global mining company. “They’ve been supportive and particularly good. We haven’t had a major incident throughout this period.”
Many companies were forced to take unprecedented steps to survive: 79% said that they asked service providers for help in some form, such as longer payment terms (47%), price reductions (45%), or free support for more processes or additional services (41%). The CIO of a large Australian bank stated, “We talked to our service providers, telling them frankly: ‘We’re sorry, we can’t keep paying for this process.’ [But] that was only for short-term relief.”
Some companies were able to cope with the crisis because of the portfolio sourcing strategies that they had adopted before the pandemic. (See Exhibit 1.) They had been distributing the services they need to offshore and onshore providers, as well as investing in building in-house capabilities. In fact, 67% focused on developing in-house capabilities, and 66% concentrated on increasing insourcing levels. These companies tasted relatively more success during the crisis than other respondents.
While many companies rely on a global footprint of service providers to prevent service breakdowns, that model doesn’t factor in the possibility of a pandemic washing over the world. Service providers, particularly in outsourcing hubs such as India and the Philippines, were hit hard, although they did their best to cope. For example, a service provider in India rented an entire hotel to ensure that its employees could work in a bubble. The company provided accommodations, access to food 24-7, stable broadband connections, and, later, regular COVID-19 testing. Other service providers negotiated with local governments to ensure that power cuts to their employees’ homes-turned-offices would be limited or, at least, predictable.
Businesses didn’t allow the urgent to drive out the important, though. Sixty-one percent of the companies we surveyed said that they accelerated parts of their digital transformation over the course of the year, although 42% noted that they slowed down some projects. (See Exhibit 2.) Thus, the popular perception that digital transformation has only accelerated in 2020 may be misleading, with some qualifications becoming necessary to understand the ground realities.
Importantly, most enterprises plan to persist with their digital transformation agenda; in fact, 96% of the companies we surveyed expect to accelerate the execution of their transformation-related projects over the next 24 months. These companies anticipate their immediate focus to be reinforcing the IT function, with more investments in cybersecurity (55%), given that people will continue to work from home; automation (49%); cloud migration to reduce costs (47%); artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning (ML), and analytics (46%); and crowdsourced innovation (35%). That focus is consistent with their prepandemic agendas: 80% had been concentrating on cybersecurity, 76% had been prioritizing moving to the cloud, and 72% had been focusing on deploying AI, ML, and analytics well before the crisis.
However, other companies will be selective about the digital transformation projects in which they will invest in the near term. Of the 76% of companies that expect to slow some of their transformation projects, 25% are likely to reduce their investments mainly in risk management, 23% in supply chain management, and 22% in HR processes. The main reasons that these companies offered for reducing these investments in the short run were either the lack of financial resources or a reprioritization of strategic objectives (74% of respondents in both cases). As a global fashion retailer succinctly put it: “We pushed ahead with all the initiatives that related to our customers and their digital journeys, but paused almost anything that wasn’t connected to our digital transformation.”
Interestingly, companies whose service providers were affected by the crisis were more likely to slow down transformation projects. “One high-profile project stalled because we needed to fly in people from India to do the work, and we couldn’t get them in [because of the COVID-19 crisis],” explained a CIO of a global minerals company. “We had to stop for six weeks, regroup, and think about how best the work could get done [under those circumstances].”
There’s a correlation between an organization’s plan to slow transformation projects and its inability to leverage service providers effectively. The survey suggests that companies planning to accelerate transformation projects anticipate relying on service providers more heavily in the future, even as they build in-house capabilities in other areas. Explained the CIO of a pharmaceutical company: “We’re not trying to compete with [our] service providers; they run business processes or activities…and we want them to continue doing that. We’re building capabilities in-house in areas such as cloud computing, automation, and data sciences. There’s a long-term advantage in having talent and creating new roles in those areas.”
With the pandemic likely to persist well into 2021 despite the recent launch of coronavirus vaccines, businesses are realizing the necessity to revamp their sourcing strategies. Building on the past year’s responses, companies are adapting their outsourcing strategies to get a bigger bang for the buck.
Before the pandemic struck, 46% of companies’ budgets was spent onshore, 23% was spent nearshore, and 31% was spent offshore. Most companies will persist with a similar mix over the next 24 months, our data shows. If the proportion of companies’ budget allocations changes, 61% of respondents said that the driver will be the need to reduce costs because the global economy isn’t recovering quickly enough, while 53% said that it will be the result of companies taking steps to ensure business continuity should more disruption occur due to a surge in the number of coronavirus cases.
Out of an abundance of caution, many companies—62% of our sample—are very likely to renegotiate outsourcing contracts. (See Exhibit 3.) The areas for future discussion will likely be changes in the contractual terms and conditions, pricing structure, delivery model, and scope of providers’ services. At the same time, companies said that they are looking to service providers to shoulder more risk, particularly when it comes to maintaining the continuity of business operations.
Many companies appear keen to build capabilities in-house to mitigate the risk of a transformation failing should gaps appear in service providers’ capabilities or performance. Attracting talent is the stiffest hurdle, though. Eighty-nine percent of the companies we surveyed reported that access to digital talent is one of the biggest challenges that they will face in the next two years. Correspondingly, an almost equal proportion of companies anticipate greater dependence on IT service providers in the same period. That’s particularly true of companies accelerating or rethinking transformation agendas.
Companies usually spend most of their outsourcing budgets on critical areas, but they may be more comfortable onshoring, rather than offshoring or investing in in-house capabilities in the future. Forty-six percent of respondents said that they would invest more in developing in-house capabilities, suggesting that onshoring will continue to play a key role. Explained the CIO for a large mining company, “We offshored a lot, but we want to keep the deep thinking around our pain points onshore. We like to work with good service providers that know our back-end systems well. That way, whenever necessary, they can step in and help our solutions teams, too.”
Only companies whose revenues declined in 2020 are trying to save costs by reducing their onshore footprints and shifting to nearshoring and offshoring. Many of the companies that we surveyed expect to increase their investments in delivery centers that focus on specialized areas such as software architecture and engineering (51%), application development (59%), application maintenance (55%), testing (53%), product design (52%), and business processes (52%). However, 11% are planning to reduce their investments in delivery centers, with 6% thinking about divestments. That’s a refreshing contrast to 2008, when, in the aftermath of the Great Recession, several companies—including AXA, Aviva, Citibank, Fidelity Group, Prudential PLC, and Philips—auctioned off delivery centers to generate much-needed liquidity.
In 2021, almost half of all the companies we surveyed will outsource more work than they will do internally. That leads us to the question: Although the future has never looked less clear, what are the key implications of our survey for businesses’ sourcing strategies? Companies should manage their outsourcing strategies in the future by taking five steps:
Companies may think long and deeply about their relationships with service providers. But, contrary to popular perception, it’s unlikely that they will shift from their current dependence on service providers. As the crisis abates, businesses are likely to invest in developing critical capabilities in-house even while using their relationships with service providers to step up the pace of digital transformations. That, in turn, places the onus on service providers to expand their skills and offerings. Coming out of the crisis, service providers would do well to be prepared not only to renegotiate costs but also to grab the capabilities-based opportunities that are bound to come their way. Only then can service providers hope to become trusted partners in companies’ digital transformations.
The authors would like to thank Rebecca Gill and Mudit Mishra for their contributions to this article.