Saturday, February 1, 2020

University Assignment: A literature review on the risks and rewards of IT insourcing and IT outsourcing to an organization.



Assignment completed as apart of my Master Studies in University College Cork.

Course: CKL18 Information Systems for Business Performance
Grade Received: 68%

Introduction:

This piece will focus on the risks and rewards of IT outsourcing and IT insourcing to an organisation. A said organisation could be a business, a charity or even a government. While specific industries outsource more than others, IT outsourcing can be seen in almost every industry. IT insourcing and IT outsourcing are not exclusive to either the public or private sector, and often an agreement can involve both sectors working together. Some companies are, in fact, the providers and the customers when it comes to IT outsourcing. This literature review will examine a wide range of academic pieces and give many real-world examples of both practices. This ambition is even though the vast majority of the existing literature is based on IT outsourcing. Find the matrix below which will be used as a fixed reference point to the references and citations made in this piece.

 The Risks and Rewards of IT Outsourcing: Literature Review

This first topic that the literature investigates is how to measure the success and failures of IT outsourcing. According to (Qu, Oh, Pinsonneault 2009) "studies typically evaluate IT outsourcing benefits by comparing manager satisfaction before and after the adoption of IT outsourcing." According to (Lacity 2000), the value of IT outsourcing is often valued in people's and especially managers points of view rather than any imperial data from past examples to support such views.

Secondly, how much of a risk is it for a company to hand over its IT department to an outsourcing company. (Rohde 2004) Explains how UK based supermarket Sainsbury "signed a seven-year deal with Accenture in 2000 to outsource all of its IT operations" However, according to the supermarket, Accenture "failed to deliver the anticipated increase in productivity." This decision led to renegotiation and extension to the contract. On the other hand, other companies have seen great success with outsourcing. (Sen 2016) explains how tech giants Google "now increasingly is starting to outsource non-core parts of its business, such as IT infrastructure management, software development and maintenance to IT services firm." (Hirschheim, Lacity 2000) Argue that venders may not have the best interest of the paying company at heart. Like all companies, outsourcers or venders want to maximise profit. Outsourcers may cut corners like the training of staff and investing in new technology.

Unfortunately, for Kodak, they are a company that perhaps took IT outsourcing too far. (Plant 2011) writes about how outsourced activities such as high-value functions such as infrastructure development and database administration, which led to a lack of IT knowledge and direction in the company. "(Dinu 2015) Points out that firms should specialise and focus on its main object of activity. Amazon is a company that benefits from being the outsourcer. According to the Amazon Web Services website, they offer storage solutions to the likes of Kellogg's, Vodafone, Comcast and Abode. (Amazon Web Services 2019). (According to Investopedia 2019) "Amazon Web Services (AWS), Amazon's cloud service, generated nearly $7.3 billion in operating income in 2018" This was more than half of Amazon's total.

Outsourcing can be beneficial to both the buyer and the seller of a service. For example, in 2001, Canadian bank Scotiabank signed a deal with IBM, which was renewed in 2007. IBM continued to "manage the big Canadian bank's information-technology operations, including its data centres, branches and automatic banking machines." Kitchener (2007) However, also, the bank kept software development in-house. IBM's work with non-core business activities allowed Scotiabank to focus on its core banking and financial services.

A prevalent form of outsourcing is offshore outsourcing. According to (Webb 2017) offshore outsourcing is primarily a geographical activity in which firms find areas of the world with cheaper labour and production costs than their own. |(Sparrow 2003) argues that India is 60-80% of the worlds insourcing market. According to the World Population Review 2019 cost of living index, India ranks below countries such as war-stricken Syria and Venezuela. This fact means that the wages US and European countries have to pay Indian workers are much lower than in their own countries.  For example, due to the cost of living, one might expect that someone in India will earn less than a quarter than someone in Norway for the same work. If we compare India with a cost of living index score of 25.14 and the United States having 70.95, someone in India could only expect to earn 28% of what someone in the US would get for the same work. Despite being a US company, IT outsourcer Cognizant Technologies has the majority of its employees in India and a growing number in Europe and the rest of the world. Note the numbers in the USA the wealthiest region declined in 2018. With employees in America, Europe, India amounts' other places in the world, Cognizant is one of the many companies who can follow the sun modal. (Carmel, Espinosa, Dubinsky 2014) Describe this as the appeal of the workday ending in one place but continuing elsewhere in the world. This option means companies can be potentially making money all day every day due to off offshoring which often comes in the form of outsourcing.

See graph one below:

Graph 1. Source; Statista

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The Risks and Rewards of IT Insourcing: Literature Review
According to (Beers 2019) "Insourcing assigns a project to a person or department within the company instead of hiring an outside person or company." (Beers 2019) also mentions that "insourcing is relatively common and is seeing greater usage by companies seeking better control of important projects and tasks." While it is often believed that outsourcing saves money, this is not always the case.  (Hirschheim, Lacity 2000) In 2019 many firms do outsource IT work, yet (Qu, Oh, Pinsonneault 2009) argue that it is difficult to say if firms who outsource perform better than firms who do not. This view is due to a lack of research on the topic.

IT insourcing is one way for a firm to save money. Not so much for what it does itself but rather through the money it saves due to lower transaction costs compared to IT Outsourcing. Firms are starting to understand how much money they could save on transaction costs. These costs are "organizing information, coordinating behaviour, safeguarding the interests of the transacting parties, monitoring the transactions, inducing the appropriate behaviour adjustments." (Aubert, Rivard, Patry 1996) While firms will have to do a lot of this whether they have the store the data or not themselves, the information will be easier to access and use if it is in-house. If the IT staff and equipment is there, it may be cheaper for firms to insource.

One significant advantage of Insourcing is keeping hold of the same staff.  Forell (2004) writes JP Morgan Chase, who is an example of a company who cancelled a contract altogether. When they terminated their contract with IBM, it did not just cost both companies much money, but it resulted in about 4,000 IBM employees, transferred to J.P. Morgan.  Many of those same workers had made the transfer in the other direction when the contract started. If this contract or any other outsourcing contract ended, it might cause those same employees to have to change again. (Brookes 2000) Found that companies with the highest intention rate also earn the highest profits. Consistent outsourcing may risk that.
According to (Hirschheim and Lacity 2000) outsourcing leads to a reduction in IT costs, this reduction. Outsourcing can be a great money saver. "IT can also help to reduce other expenses such as sales and general administrative costs which are often four or five times IT Costs". (Han Mithas 2014) One example of a company who did this successfully was Axa. According to (Sparrow 2003 pg 15) Axa with the help of its own IT department reduced technology costs by 6% and in the meanwhile rejecting the introduction of outsourcing within the company.

Small to medium-size business (SMEs) may struggle to invest in every service due to financial constraints. (Qu, Oh, Pinsonneault 2009) Point out that IT insourcing can be advantages over IT outsourcing because it allows for the easier passage of information between business and IT staff. The alternative IT outsourcing, the "coordination is between outside IT vendors and business clients." IT insourcing is a form of shared knowledge which is the common knowledge that two or more parties share. Two different companies may use different systems or work in completely misaligned time zones. All of these factors make it harder for a buyer of service to potentially get in contact with the vender than it would be with someone from within their own company.


Discussion from Study of Literature
The first risk is that it is dangerous to use manager satisfaction an accurate measure of the success of IT outsourcing as some managers bring satisfaction from having less work to do rather than getting satisfaction from what is best for the company.  At the highest level when organisations agree to outsource IT, they understandably expect an increase in productivity or a decrease in costs for the same productivity. So, when managers satisfaction and especially managers that are not the buyers' employees are the judge of this, it can lead to problems. 

Companies need to be careful about what outsourcing companies they trust to do a good job. Objectives need to be measurable, attainable and specific, timely and relevant for both firms. Companies also need to follow the example of Google and be careful that they are only outsourcing non-core activities. They have to avoid the traps of Kodak who by outsourcing all of their IT operations and falling behind their competitors. This decision led to the company missing out on many-core IT developments due to a lack of IT knowledge within the company. (DiSalvo 2011) writes that "Kodak was making odd manoeuvres, like acquiring pharmaceutical giant Sterling Drugs for $5.1 billion and trying to establish a brand in the battery business." Had the company's IT staff is more significant and had more say it is improbable that Kodak would have been so resistant to the emergence of digital photography which led to them falling behind the like of Canon and Nikon. Kodak did not realise how vital its core IT Activities and knowledge were and paid the price. IT outsourcing can work for any company, but the importance keep core IT activities within the company cannot be mentioned enough. Kitchener's (2007) example of IBM and Scotiabank is an excellent example of this.

Buyers of services are also at risk that outsourcers will do the bare minimum in terms of investing in their staff and technology. This possibility is challenging for buyers of services to keep an eye on compared to if said IT activities were happening in-house. Buyers need to protect themselves in agreements to make sure that outsourcers do not cut corners which would reduce the buyer's competitiveness in the marketplace.


One advantage IT insourcing has over IT Outsourcing is that staff members are more consistent. Situations, when employees are switching between companies, can be very unsettling for them and their families. A firm with many outsourcing changes may struggle to attract the highest skilled workers because they may become wary of said upheavals in their lives. Taylor 1996 argues that companies who only see employees as costs and not assets will cut the "bone" of a company "rather than just trying to remove the fat." On the other hand, SMEs will find it challenging to find the money to invest in the capital and people. Companies who fail to outsource risk becoming overstretched trying to do everything. This fact could lead to IT staff becoming overwhelmed and leaving due to a heavy workload. To stay competitive company's need to have access to modern tools.

Offshoring, as a form of outsourcing, will likely increase in a globalised world. Companies based in more affluent countries will continue to seek employees within and outside of their own country to save money and to provide better services. The prevailing trend over the last few decades has seen European and American companies outsource many of their IT services to India. This is due to the high number of English speakers in the country. According to (Masani 2012), there are over 125 million English speakers in India. India is a lot poorer than its English-speaking counterparts from as the UK, USA, Canada, Australia and Ireland. Meaning this trend will likely continue unless a cheaper market emerges. While that seems impossible now, over the last few decades, European and American companies have outsourced many businesses to China. While this is still happening, there are hundreds of millions of Chinese people joining the middle class and leaving poverty behind. McKinsey Quarterly (2006). So much so that China is now the exporter to countries in Africa like Ethiopia. (Donahue 2018). A similar rise in the standard of living and wages in India would be a massive risk to companies in the western world looking for cheap, English speaking IT outsourcing labour.
Conclusion


        IT Outsourcing







IT Insourcing
                                                                       Reward                                               Risk

This piece finds that both IT outsourcing and IT insourcing come with many risks and rewards. However, what is most vital for sellers is that they identify what their core and non-core activities are. They must be sure that they only outsource non-core activities. When they do this, they need to commutate with their own IT to make sure employees do not become demotivated and feel like they are being replaced. It makes sense for SMEs to look for agreements with outsourcing companies. This view is because they may not be big enough or to have the money to specialise in every aspect that is needed for their business to flourish. It sometimes just makes more sense for a business to export some of its business to experts.  One reason why capitalism is successful is that it allows people to specialise in producing expect products and provide high-quality services. It is hard for any company but especially small to medium-size ones to be good at everything, and they should not try to be as it would prove too costly.

With IT Outsourcing and IT insourcing been relatively new things compared to other focuses of academia, one might expect a lack of academic literature. However, this is not the case for IT outsourcing. So much, so that is was impossible to discuss every aspect of IT Outsourcing. However, in the case, in terms of IT insourcing, there is a real lack of literature. Due to this, at times, one must invert the rewards of IT outsourcing to talk about the risks of IT insourcing and invert the risks of IT outsourcing to find the potential rewards of insourcing.

In the future, there should be an increased focus on IT insourcing. This view includes the impact on businesses as a money saver and its overall effectiveness. The role of IT is increasing with every passing year, and significant question companies need to ask is “should we outsource or insource said activity?” This decision is made difficult by a lack of research into IT outsourcing. The challenge will be getting organisations to release information to researchers. This is from both a competition point of view but also new EU GDPR.  It is still unsure how this will affect research a whole and not just this particular topic.



















References:


Beers (2019) Outsourcing vs. Insourcing: What's the Difference?
Beulen & Ribbers (2010) Managing IT Outsourcing
Brooks, R., 2000. Why loyal employees and customers improve the bottom line. The Journal for Quality and Participation, 23(2), pp. 40-44






Feeny, Leslie, Wilcocks (1998), Core IS Capabilities for Exploiting Information Technology



Lacity & Willcocks (2003) IT Sourcing Objectives, Wirtschaftsinformatik
Investopedia (2019), How Amazon Makes Money
Nelson, K., & Cooprider, J. (1996). The Contribution of Shared Knowledge to IS Group
McKinsey Quarterly (2006) The value of China’s emerging middle class https://www.mckinsey.com/featured-insights/china/the-value-of-emerging-middle-class-in-china
Performance. MIS Quarterly, 20(4), 409-432. doi:10.2307/249562
New York Times (2008), The Benefits of Outsourcing for Small Businesses https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/allbusiness/AB5221523_primary.html?mcubz=0
Plant (2011), A Kodak Moment to Reconsider the Value of IT
Sparrow 2003, Successful IT Outsourcing: From Choosing a Provider to Managing the Project https://tech.economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/corporate/google-starts-outsourcing-more-business-to-it-firms-such-as-cognizant/51625250?redirect=1
Qu, Oh, Pinsonneault (2009), The strategic value of IT insourcing: An IT-enabled business process perspective
Webb 2017, What Is Offshoring? What Is Outsourcing? Are They Different? https://www.forbes.com/sites/jwebb/2017/07/28/what-is-offshoring-what-is-outsourcing-are-they-different/
World Population Review (2019) Cost Of Living By Country http://worldpopulationreview.com/countries/cost-of-living-by-country/
































Bibliography:
Luftmann (2003), Competiting in the Information Age, Align in the Sand, Oxford Press
Miller, T. I., Kobayashi, M. M., & Noble, P. M. (2006). Insourcing, Not Capacity Building, a Better Model for Sustained Program Evaluation. American Journal of Evaluation, 27(1), 83–94. https://doi.org/10.1177/10982140052831855
Nelson, K., & Cooprider, J. (1996). The Contribution of Shared Knowledge to IS Group
Performance. MIS Quarterly, 20(4), 409-432. doi:10.2307/249562
Valorinta (2011) IT Alignment And The Boundaries of The IT Function, Journal of Information Technology

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