Positioning For an Economic Upswing

by Steve Ciske 22. February 2010 21:05


541212430_073f891623 The last few year have been terrible.  It doesn’t matter what industry you’re in, your education level or place of residency.  The latest economic down-turn has been rough on all of us.  However, there are signs of an upturn and you need to be prepared for it.  How do you position your teams to respond and meet the demand of your business?  Getting smart about outsourcing might be the key!

The next upturn is going to present a few realities that you will need to come to terms with.  The first, is that  your company has ‘right-sized’ your organization at some point.  Translation, you have less resources than you did before the bust.  The second is that the economy is starting to pick-up.  Translation, you will lose talent.  The third, and most important, is that your company will want to be ahead of the curve and implement technologies and products so that they can gain the most by the upswing. 

The challenge as an IT manager is how do you ‘ramp-up’ for the upswing?  You will face the challenge of fleeting talent as well as increased demand.  You need to develop a resource strategy that is scalable and forgivable.  So what is the solution.  Outsourcing.

Outsourcing is probably the one word that will have all IT pros see red.  I think it’s a natural reaction giving the recent experiences of most IT pros.  However, now is the time to leverage the ‘right-size’ outsource solution so that you can continue to meet the demands of your company’s IT demands and best position your team.

So what is this mythical outsourcing phenomenon I speak of?  It’s coming to the realization that you don’t have enough team capacity nor the time or energy to meet the current needs.  You don’t want to bring on full-timers that you will have to layoff  when the demand levels off, you owe your employees more than that for sure.  So now is the time to start to develop outsourcing relationships.  And make no mistake.  These arrangements are relationships. 

Develop Level 1 Outsourcing

Phase one of an outsourcing relationship is simple.  Get some contractors in that your team manages.  Not all firms love this arrangement, but guess what, the economy is tough and they will do it.  The benefit is that you can release or add contractors as your demand requires.  You don’t have to lay anyone off, and the vendors begin to learn what your standards are and what you expect.  You can also use this to see what the strengths and weaknesses of each vendor are.  I call this the ‘getting to know you phase’.  The main advantage is that you can increase the capacity of your team without having to hire an FTE.

Develop Level 2 Outsourcing

This level is a bit more challenging and requires you to have a level of trust.  You have gotten to know a vendor and now want to outsource a project because your team just does not have the capacity to complete it when the business needs it.  It is critical that you make this distinction.  This is not about cost savings, it’s about increased capacity.  Your team needs to have tight control, good project definition and good management in place.  When considering moving to this stage I recommend giving a vendor the easiest or best defined project you have.  At this point your success is tied to theirs and theirs to yours.  I recommend managing risk though the statement of work, verifying work with your own QA resources and assigning your own technical resource to oversee the project. 

The best strategy when negotiating this: Fixed Bid.  Why fixed bid?  Fixed bid is a shared risk.  Each party has skin in the game.  They want to make a profit, you want the project completed.  It puts you and the vendor in a shared  risk relationship. 

Develop Level 3 Outsourcing

I know what you are thinking, level 3 outsourcing is complete project outsourcing.  Something I’ve learned through trial and error is not an optimal solution.  Level 3 is all about reducing cost and freeing up resources.  It’s not project driven.  When you get to level 3 you should be looking to outsource the remedial tasks that your full-time staff does day-to-day. Also known as application maintenance.  At level 3 you want to move maintenance to a lower cost resource so your internal resources can continue to spend time managing Level 2 while keeping IP in-house!

The economy is picking up.  Now is the time to start implementing these strategies!