Offshore Accounting Outsourcing The Case of India
Offshore Accounting Outsourcing The Case of India
Offshore Accounting Outsourcing The Case of India
The views expressed in this publication are those of the authors and are not
necessarily those of the Centre for Business Performance of the Institute of
Chartered Accountants in England and Wales. All research reports published by the
Centre for Business Performance are independently refereed before publication.
Chartered Accountants Trustees Limited 2008
This report was produced with the help of a grant from the Institute of Chartered
Accountants in England and Wales charitable trusts. These trusts support
educational projects relating to accountancy and economics. The Centre for
Business Performance manages all grant applications and copyright requests.
July 2008
ISBN 978-1-84152-542-6
TECPLN7501
OFFSHORE ACCOUNTING
OUTSOURCING: THE CASE OF INDIA
A report by
Dr Brian Nicholson
Manchester Business School
Dr Aini Aman
Universiti Kebangsaan, Malaysia
Contents
Page
About the authors
1.
Acknowlegements
vi
Executive summary
vii
Introduction
1.1
Objectives
1.2
Case studies
1.2.1
AlphacorpBetaCom
1.2.2
GowingIndiBackOffice
1.2.3
ArdonTechnoaccounts
1.3
2.
Report structure
2.1
Risk
2.1.1
Relational risk
2.1.2
Performance risk
10
2.1.3
Mitigating risks
12
14
2.2.2
Social control
15
2.2.3
Chunkification
16
Control
2.2.1
12
2.3
Trust
16
2.4
18
19
3.1
Governance
19
3.1.1
Contract
19
3.1.2
Organisation structure
19
3.1.3
Meetings
20
3.2
3.3
3.4
4.
2.2
3.
Risks
20
3.2.1
Relational risks
20
3.2.2
Performance risk
23
Mitigating risks
24
3.3.1
Chunkification
24
3.3.2
Behavioural control
25
3.3.3
Output control
28
3.3.4
Social control
28
29
31
4.1
Governance
31
4.1.1
Contract
31
4.1.2
Organisation structure
31
4.1.3
Governance meetings
32
4.2
Mitigating risks
32
Contents iii
4.3
5.
32
4.2.2
Behaviour control
34
4.2.3
Output control
35
4.2.4
Trust
35
36
37
5.1
Governance
37
5.1.1
Contract
37
5.1.2
Organisation structure
37
5.1.3
The process
38
5.3
5.4
Risks
39
5.2.1
Relational risks
39
5.2.2
Performance risks
41
Mitigating risk
42
5.3.1
Trust
42
5.3.2
Chunkification
44
5.3.3
Output control
45
5.3.4
Behavioural control
45
46
48
6.1
Risk
48
6.2
Control
48
6.3
Trust
50
6.4
Discussion
51
References
iv Contents
Social control
5.2
6.
4.2.1
53
Acknowledgments
We are most grateful for financial and moral support provided by the Institute of
Chartered Accountants in England and Wales charitable trusts and to Gillian Knight,
Research Manager at the ICAEW Centre for Business Performance. Company names
are anonymised for reasons of confidentiality. Our sincere thanks go to all interviewees
for access, their time, kindness and hospitality; openness in interviews; and for making
the research process a pleasure to engage in. We would also like to thank those friends
who helped with providing connections for interviews in the UK and India particularly
Yash Rishi (ukasl.com), Nina Sodha and Ed Clark (financial-vision.co.uk). Thanks also
to Clive Tucker (Ashurst.com), Sachdev Ramakrishna (Mphasis); Hammad Farooqi
(TechnoBeavers.com), Shaun Walsh (justfinancialadmin.com). We acknowledge the input
of our ex-colleague Dr Julian Jones who helped with the research proposal and attended
some of the interviews before leaving Manchester Business School for a new career in
consultancy. Finally, but not least, our thanks to Professor Robert Scapens, adviser to the
project, for comments on earlier drafts. All errors or omissions are the responsibility of
the authors alone.
vi Acknowledgements
Executive summary
This report explores the role of trust and control in mitigating risk in global outsourcing
of accounting activities. During the 1990s, reductions in cost and increased capacity of
telecommunications and computing facilitated the global outsourcing of various business
activities offshore to places where the labour supply is both cheap and plentiful. India,
Philippines, Sri Lanka and increasingly China, are key locations for this work.1 The global
IT industry has led the development of offshore outsourcing of various processes of
software development. Structured activities such as programming, which can be clearly
and relatively unambiguously specified, were the first to be outsourced to foreign firms.
Activities in other business areas have followed including transaction processing, data
input, transcription, and call centres in and outbound. Over time, outsourcing vendors
and clients have improved their understanding of how outsourced activities may be
undertaken remotely. Inevitably, clients aim to take advantage of labour cost arbitrage,
which has led to offshore outsourcing of categories of work previously considered
inappropriate. Since the late 1990s this has included more sophisticated accounting
functions, beyond simple data input and transactions. However, the offshore outsourcing
of accounting presents significant risks through the potential for poor performance and
vendor opportunism.
Research on financial services offshore outsourcing has concluded that moving various
activities to foreign locations can contribute to risk of undermining market confidence,
of increasing financial crime and of harming consumer protection. The main problem
identified is the complexity of achieving suitable management and control from a
distance. However, appropriate governance frameworks, risk management systems and
controls can identify and mitigate operational risks from offshoring (FSA 2005). What are
these controls, risk management systems and governance frameworks and how effective
are they in mitigating risks associated with offshore accounting outsourcing?
There have been many codes, standards and regulations such as the Sarbanes-Oxley Act
for internal controls (section 302), ISO9000 (quality) and BS7799 (security) standards
adopted by some firms with the aim of providing quality assurance and risk mitigation.
Some firms have opted to attempt to control risks by opening offshore processing
subsidiaries rather than outsource to a vendor. However, there is a danger that focus
on compliance shrouds underlying risks, and increased control through ownership in
subsidiary operations seems to offer no guarantor against fraud.
Some firms are returning operations to UK. For example in 2006 Powergen decided to
bring back 980 call centre jobs from India. Abbey closed its call centres in India after
customers reported dissatisfaction with the banks 1,000 seat call centre in Bangalore.
Furthermore, there have been numerous cases of financial scams where Indian workers
have supplied customer data to fraudsters. In 2006, 233,000 was taken from HSBC in
a fraud case stemming from a breach of security in India. These are examples of two key
risks of offshore outsourcing: opportunism and drop in performance, which may occur
as a result of moving work offshore in subsidiary operations or offshore outsourcing.
From outsourcing to offshoring, special report SR5, London: Faculty of Finance and Management, ICAEW,
October 2004 contains a review of locations for outsoucing. AT Kearney produce a location attractiveness
index, Offshoring for Long-Term Advantage: The 2007 A.T. Kearney Global Services Location Index, Chicago:
A.T. Kearney, Inc, 2007 available at www.atkearney.com/res/shared/pdf/GSLI2007.pdf
Executive summary vii
This report aims to investigate risks and risk mitigation through controls and/or trust,
to facilitate offshore outsourcing.2 After introducing the topic and the objectives of this
study in Chapter 1, we outline the background of global outsourcing in Chapter 2.
This chapter combines insights from prior studies on risk and risk mitigation, explains
a framework to be used in this study, and highlights the main findings of the study.
Chapters 3 to 5 provide detailed empirical findings in the form of three case studies.
Data was collected during a period of intensive fieldwork in 20056. This included
interviews with UK-based clients and vendors in India involved in outsourcing accounting
activities offshore. Data was also gathered from discussions with accounting outsourcing
experts (consultants, lawyers) in the UK and India. The case studies are used to illustrate
how risks are mitigated in offshore outsourcing cases of varying size, complexity and
types of accounting activity outsourced. The three case studies are representative of
these factors.
The sample, firm names anonymised on request, includes the case study of Alphacorp
and BetaCom, which is one of the worlds largest examples of offshore accounting
outsourcing in terms of firm sizes and volumes. Alphacorp is one of the worlds largest
petrochemical companies and BetaCom is one of the largest outsourcing vendors which
has global centres for accounts processing. The second case study is that of Gowing and
IndiBackOffice. Firms such as IndiBackOffice have regional coverage within USA, Europe
and/or Asia. The third case study is of a relatively small firm of chartered accountants in
North West England, Ardon, and their relationship with Technoaccounts, a small offshore
outsourcing vendor operating from Chennai. We describe the case studies and then use
the framework to identify how the risks evident in those case studies are mitigated by
control and/or trust. The report concludes with the main lessons summarised below:
Small firms can engage in offshore outsourcing and there is a role for
consultants, lawyers and other intermediaries to assist in providing standardised
contracts and guidance at a reasonable price. Small firms considering offshore
outsourcing should decide a predefined strategic planning goal beyond cost
savings prior to offshore outsourcing.
Vendors should be cognisant of the imperative for risk mitigation and present
clients with a range of controls according to type of work and risk control
preference.
Audit cost implications of offshore outsourcing are beyond the scope of this study.
1. Introduction
Offshore outsourcing of various accounting activities is becoming an increasingly
attractive option for many companies as a means of gaining access to scarce skills,
cutting costs and obtaining competitiveness. Due to the improvements in international
telecommunications from the early 1990s, it has become possible for various business
activities to be outsourced by clients, particularly in Western Europe and the USA,
to vendor firms in foreign locations. Although other countries are involved, India is
recognised as a leading location for software, remote customer interaction, data analysis,
and importantly for this report, various aspects of accounting. Table 1.1 provides a list
of activities which are commonly outsourced to vendors in India.
Table 1.1: Accounting activity outsourced offshore
Order to cash: order management, billing, accounts receivables, cash receipts and
application, credit and collections, bank reconciliations.
Purchase to payment: purchase order management, vendor management, cash
disbursement, bank reconciliations, contract administration, cost accounting, fixed
assets.
Hire to retire: payroll, benefits administration, employee data administration,
pension accounting, travel and expense compliance.
Financial reporting: general accounting, consolidation and management reporting,
intercompany allocations, activity based costing, reconciliations, project accounting,
tax compliance, tax returns.
Compliance and control: cash management, treasury, budgeting, forecasting,
regulatory reporting, risk management.3
A recent ICAEW report4 has established the importance of outsourcing, and in particular
offshore outsourcing, of parts or all of the accounting function to India and other locations.
While documents such as the ICAEW report into offshore outsourcing are a valuable
contribution, there is currently sparse in-depth research on the practices and mechanisms
involved in managing offshore outsourcing relationships. This report aims to fill the gap
and complement prior literature (Wood, Barrar and Jones, 2001; Nicholson, Jones and
Espenlaub, 2006).
1.1 Objectives
Prior research has concluded that the main risk of offshore outsourcing is the complexity
of achieving suitable management oversight and control from a distance. However,
appropriate governance frameworks, risk management systems and controls can identify
and mitigate risks (Stanton 2006; FSA, 2005). This statement begs the question of what
are the risks for accounting offshore outsourcing? What constitutes suitable management
oversight and control from a distance? What are appropriate governance frameworks,
risk management systems and controls for offshore outsourcing of accounting activities?
This report attempts to answer these questions and provides an inquiry into risk and risk
mitigation to facilitate offshore accounting outsourcing.5 Mitigation includes the visible
control mechanisms and less visible social interactions and relationships that underpin
3
The list of activities of a vendor Outsource Partners International (OPI) www.opiglobal.com. OPI were
interviewed as part of this research, reported in Nicholson et al. (2006).
From outsourcing to offshoring, special report SR5, London: Faculty of Finance and Management, ICAEW,
October 2004.
Audit cost implications of offshore outsourcing are beyond the scope of this study.
Introduction 1
trust in outsourcing offshore. The study has involved interviews with directors, managers
and other staff in three case study organisations involving both the client (in the UK)
and the vendor (in India). This research has two specific objectives:
to identify the types, role and impact of control and trust in managing risk.
1.2.1 AlphacorpBetaCom
The first case involves one of the largest examples of offshore accounting outsourcing in
terms of firm size and volume. Alphacorp is a global chemicals company, BetaCom is one
of the worlds largest global accounting outsourcing vendors.
Alphacorp has well-established operations in Europe, North and South America, Australia,
Asia and Africa. Revenue turnover in 2005 was over US$200 billion employing over
90,000 staff globally. The accounting department in Alphacorp employs over 4,000
people. The first outsourcing of accounting for Alphacorp was in 1990 when it appointed
Sigma, a competitor of BetaCom. In 1996, Alphacorp retained Sigma but handed
responsibility for accounting operations across Europe to another major accounting
outsourcing firm, Delta, who managed a processing centre in Holland, which handled
outsourced work from Germany, Austria, Switzerland, and Belgium. In 2000, Delta
established a processing centre in Portugal to cater for the offshored work from other
European countries: Spain, France and Portugal. The hub in Holland served Germanic
speaking countries and Portugal served the Latin and English speaking countries (UK,
Spain, Portugal and France). In 2002, Delta was acquired by BetaCom. In 2004, Sigma
and BetaCom began to transfer part of Alphacorps outsourced accounting to Bangalore
where both vendors maintain processing centres. BetaCom investment in India (and
Portugal) is wholly owned by BetaCom. BetaCom through acquisition gained the
10-year Alphacorp contract worth approximately US$1 billion. In the first two years after
outsourcing, Alphacorp saved approximately US$50 million and over the next eight years
expects to save US$200 million. The acquisition of Delta extended BetaComs industry
2 Introduction
For example Offshoring for Long-Term Advantage: The 2007 A.T. Kearney Global Services Location Index,
Chicago: A.T. Kearney, Inc, 2006 available at www.atkearney.com/re/shared/pdf/GSLI2007.pdf
Event
1990
1996
2000
2002
2004
The accounting services outsourced from Alphacorp to BetaCom are mainly related
to accounting transactional processing work. This includes cash receipts, cash and
banking, inter-company accounts payable, fixed assets, yearly expenses, balance sheet
accounting reconciliation; bank account reconciliation, the month-end close process,
and providing information through general ledger in monthly reporting. Alphacorp still
retains customer services, decision-making such as deciding the accounting code, and
critical business activities such as collecting accounts receivable from Alphacorp clients,
monthly forecasts, planning analysis, business analysis, cash management, policy and
reporting. These services are performed by the Alphacorp internal accounting function.
BetaCom transferred part of the transaction processing work to India, which included
cash and banking, reconciliation of accounts payable to general ledger, fixed assets,
and accounts payable such as the processing of invoices and vendor set up. Table 1.3
summarises the tasks being outsourced from Alphacorp to BetaCom and from BetaCom
(Portugal) to BetaCom (India).
Table 1.3: Distribution of tasks between client and vendor
Location
Tasks
Alphacorp
Customer services
Decision-making such as deciding the accounting code
Critical business activities such as collecting accounts receivable from
Alphacorp clients, monthly forecasts, planning analysis, business analysis,
cash management, policy, closing of books and the reporting.
BetaCom
(Portugal)
Cash receipts
Cash and banking
Inter-company accounts payable
Fixed assets
Yearly expenses
Reconciliation
General ledger
BetaCom
(India)
Introduction 3
1.2.2 GowingIndiBackOffice
The second case study is that of Gowing and IndiBackOffice. Although smaller in size
and scale than the case study of Alphacorp and BetaCom, a very high proportion of the
accounting function (approximately 90%) of Gowing is outsourced to IndiBackOffice.
Gowing is a firm in the travel industry. The company has 7,000,000 customers annually
and by the end of 2004, employed over 17,000 staff. Gowing UK owns several popular
brands for charter package holidays. Gowing faced a crisis of mounting debt and a
UK-wide downturn in travel. The resulting financial restructuring plan included cost
cutting, a debt-for-equity swap and outsourcing of accounting activities. Gowing
engaged in a process of competitive tendering to choose an accounting outsourcing
vendor which included a request for information and a proposal. There were at least
three companies bidding for the contract. Gowing used an independent consultant to
check the strengths and weaknesses of the bidders and a specialist law firm designed the
contract. IndiBackOffice was short listed and won the Gowing contract in late 2004.
IndiBackOffice was launched in 2001 and has regional coverage (USA, Europe, and
Asia) and several offshore centres in India. IndiBackOffices group overall revenue in
2005 was in excess of 350 million; its total number of employees exceeds 7000 with
approximately 3000 based in India. The company has experienced rapid growth; the
number of employees in IndiBackOffice (India) has increased by 50% between 2004 and
2005. Revenue serviced by IndiBackOffices Indian operations has increased by 45% in
the same period. In addition to accounting, IndiBackOffices services include a range of
business and technology consulting across all major business sectors.
Gowing outsource approximately 90% of the accounting function to IndiBackOffice
including accounts receivable, accounts payable overheads, accounts payable overseas,
general ledger, principal ledger, financial reporting, cash management, applications
management and support. (Accounts payable overheads relates to paying UK suppliers
rent and rates; and accounts payable overseas relates to paying overseas suppliers and
hoteliers.) Principal ledger is a process which manages the relationship between Gowing
and tour operators. IndiBackOffice sends part of the Gowing accounting to its offshore
centre in Chennai, India hereafter referred to as IndiBackOffice (India). This includes the
transactional processing, accounts payable, accounts receivable, payroll, and business
expenses, as well as financial reporting.
1.2.3 ArdonTechnoaccounts
The third case study is of Ardon, a relatively small firm of chartered accountants in North
West England, and their relationship with Technoaccounts, a localised provider also based
in Chennai, India. In 2006 Ardon had an approximate revenue turnover of 600,000,
and 10 employees, three of whom were part time. Offshore outsourcing began in 1999
with a Mumbai-based firm, Globalcom, followed with a shift to UK-based homeworkers
in 2002. The current relationship with Technoaccounts began in 2002. Outsourcing at
Ardon has been followed since 2001 including two phases of offshore outsourcing: (1)
outsourcing offshore to Globalcom (Mumbai, India) and (2) outsourcing offshore to
Technoaccounts. Most emphasis is given to the latter period. Table 1.4 shows the
evolution of the firms outsourcing strategy over time.
4 Introduction
Period
Reason
Services
outsourced
Prior to
1999
In-house
19992002
Globalcom
Low
priority
clients
2002
In-house
home
workers
All client
work
2005
Technoaccounts
All client
work
The decision by Ardon to outsource to Technoaccounts was taken in April 2005 and was
ongoing at the end of our study in 2006. Technoaccounts was established in Chennai,
India in February 2002 and is a joint venture between Indian businessmen but there is
some equity ownership by a UK accounting firm. Currently, Technoaccounts has its
operations in Chennai, India. When we visited Technoaccounts offices we found them to
be in a busy Chennai street, offices were plain and basic and staff work in small booths
in an open plan office.
Technoaccounts were selected after the director of Ardon attended a conference where
he met a number of Technoaccounts clients who had used the service and stated
that they were satisfied. This introduction through a trusted network and personal
recommendation was enough to provide Ardon with sufficient trust in the competence
of Technoaccounts to request a demonstration and subsequently a contract for
250 hours per month of service. This translated into 20 accounting jobs at an average
of 12.5 hours in one month. Ardon told us they chose Technoaccounts for four
main reasons:
Data stayed in the UK. It was scanned and transferred to India electronically.
Technoaccounts would be able to access Indias massive labour pool and thus
Ardon could grow alongside Technoaccounts.
Introduction 5
Readers may choose to examine this report from cover to cover. However, the case
studies purposely represent a spectrum from small to very large in terms of size of
firm, contract value and scope of accounting function outsourced. We would anticipate
that all readers would read Chapter 2, and would choose to focus on a particular
detailed case of closest relevance to their individual circumstances. Thus, a partner in a
firm of small chartered accountants would find the case of Ardon (Chapter 5) of most
interest. A medium-sized firm considering outsourcing a high proportion of their
accounting function may extract most value from GowingIndiBackOffice (Chapter 4).
Planners in large firms considering outsourcing may learn most of relevance from
AlphacorpBetaCom (Chapter 3). Naturally, in all instances value may be extracted from
all the cases as even a small firm can learn something from AlphacorpBetaCom and
vice versa. We leave this to the discretion of our readers and hope that the experiences
reported here will help them achieve success in their own offshore outsourcing
endeavours.8
6 Introduction
Das and Teng (2001) provide an integrated three-part theoretical framework for the
study of risk, control and trust shown in Figure 2.1. Trust and control are inextricably
interlinked with risk, defined as the probability and impact of undesirable outcomes. The
framework presents the risk of poor performance of an outsourcing vendor (performance
risk) or a breakdown in the relationship (relational risk). These two categories of risk may
be reduced (mitigated) by controls of a formal or informal nature; or by goodwill or
competence trust. In the sections to follow, we consider risk and progress to discussing
the relationship between risk, trust and control.
Figure 2.1: Framework of risk, control and trust
Trust
Goodwill trust
Competence trust
Risk
Relational risk
Performance risk
Control
Behaviour control
Output control
Social control
Chunkification
2.1 Risk
2.1.1 Relational risk
Relational risk is, in essence, the risk of a vendor or client not co-operating in good faith;
it embraces the probability and consequences of not having satisfactory co-operation
in an outsourcing relationship. Opportunistic behaviour such as cheating, shirking,
distorting information etc. may be manifested by either vendor or client, or indeed both
firms. Prior research provides instances of potential vendor opportunism in offshore
outsourcing (Aron and Singh 2005, Aron et al. 2005) as follows:
Vendors poach proprietary business processes; resell them or use them in direct
competition with the client.
Example
Fraud A study by
Transparency International
(2006) reports a high
level of corruption in
India. No equivalent EU
law on data protection
or intellectual property
currently exists.
Renegotiation
The vendor might act
opportunistically during
negotiation since, if
the client has no
alternative, then the
client must accept the
terms that the vendor
offers.
A reverse transition plan is intended to repatriate client processes back to the client or to another
vendor. It should include reverse knowledge transfer, project personnel debriefing and infrastructure
decommissioning. The inclusion of such clauses is typically done at contract negotiation phase along
with conditions indicating which party should bear the cost.
Issue
Communication
issues
Cultural issues
Knowledge
2.2 Control
Control may be understood as a process of regulation and monitoring for the
achievement of organisational goals (Das and Teng, 2001). Control can be achieved
through governance structures, contractual specifications and other managerial
arrangements concerned with controlling the partner and the outsourcing alliance.
A summary is given in Table 2.4.
Mechanism
Output control
Behaviour control
Policies, procedures,
Reporting structure
Staffing and training
Standards
Social control
Participatory decision-making
Rituals, ceremonies, networking
Chunkification
Output control consists of control over the outcomes of a process during or at the end.
Measures consist of metrics, benchmarks and indicators used to judge desired against
actual performance. Behaviour control consists of rules, procedures and policies to
monitor and reward. Social controls are concerned with propagating organisational
norms, values, and culture to encourage desirable behaviour. Social control, in contrast
with formal output and behaviour control, involves no attempt to specify behaviour or
outcome at the start. Goal setting is decentralised and evolves through socialisation and
consensus building, allowing members to develop shared views to influence behaviour.
Chunkification is concerned with dividing any process into separate component activities
or chunks that can be outsourced in a manner that reduces the risk relative to that of
outsourcing the entire process (Aron et al. 2005 p38). Vertical chunkification describes
which activities will be allocated to the client and vendor or multiple vendors. Horizontal
chunkification describes what portion or fraction of an activity will be allocated to client
and vendor(s).
Prior research indicates that the choice of controls depends on the extent to which
tasks can be codified or specified in an exact and precise manner and whether the
measurement of the outputs can be precise and objective (Das and Teng, 2001;
Aron and Singh, 2005; Aron et al. 2005). Codifiability is essentially the ability of an
organisation to codify its work according to pre-set rules. If it is possible to systematically
describe each situation and stipulate precisely what employee responses should be in
each scenario then according to Aron and Singh (2005) people anywhere in the world
can do the job for them (p138). Potential for measurement refers to the ability to
measure outputs in a precise and objective manner. Das and Teng differentiate between
metrics to measure outputs and those that measure the behaviour of the vendors agents
during the process. They posit that output control is appropriate in situations where
outputs are measurable and may be used for control where codifying work is difficult.
Such metrics may include tolerance limits for errors and completion times. Process
(behaviour) control, such as policies and procedures, reporting structures and training,
works best in situations where work is codifiable but outputs are not easily measurable.
Where work is not codifiable and outputs are difficult to measure, social control is
appropriate because it provides the ability for measurement to be avoided at the
beginning but still allows control of the group members.
Findings
Table 2.5 below shows the governance structures in the two large firm cases.
Meetings
Participatory
decision-making
10
SLA is a formal part of the contract which typically will specify the measures for availability and
performance and other attributes of the service. It also typically includes penalties in case of SLA
violation.
Risk and offshore outsourcing of accounting 15
2.2.3 Chunkification
Alphacorp determines the scope and the type of accounting outsourced to Portugal and
India. Tasks that cannot be codified are not outsourced. Chunkification across the cases is
shown to operate between hubs, these being BetaCom (Portugal) BetaCom (India),
and IndiBackOffice (UK) IndiBackOffice (India). Hubs mitigate the communication,
language and cultural risks through skills, institutions and infrastructure in the hub
location. Vertical chunkification describes which activities will be allocated to the client
and vendor or multiple vendors. Alphacorp outsource to BetaCom and one other major
vendor. Ardon has relatively smaller needs in terms of volume, scope and the type of
work outsourced to India. Only straightforward accounting work is outsourced ie, that
which would generate a minimal number of queries from the vendor staff in India.
Client facing activity (consultancy) is the other major category of work not outsourced.
Table 2.8 presents examples of chunkification at AlphacorpBetaCom.
Table 2.8: Chunkification at AlphacorpBetaCom
Horizontal chunkification
BetaCom (Portugal) is an example of near shore outsourcing as Portugal is physically
closer to the UK than India so travel is easier for alleviating any problems such as
language capability of staff. Furthermore, Portugal is a data safe harbour, within EU
and is subject to EU data protection legislation.
Vertical chunkification
Alphacorp maintain a second vendor (dual sourcing), which enables performance
comparison and acts as a deterrent to opportunism.
2.3 Trust
The third dimension of the framework is trust, which may be understood as positive
expectations in a risky situation (Das and Teng 2001). Two major types of trust are
identified: competence and goodwill trust (Table 2.9).
Table 2.9: Mechanisms of trust
Trust type
Mechanism
Competence trust
Direct communication
Networking with other firms
Goodwill trust
Positive expectations regarding goodwill and the competence of a vendor can act to
reduce the perceived risks in an outsourcing relationship. Goodwill trust is concerned
with a partners positive intentions and integrity, and if present, may act to reduce the
likelihood of opportunism. However, Das and Teng point out that goodwill trust has little
or no impact on performance risk as sources of such risk lie in appropriate resources or
industry competition, neither of which is affected by goodwill trust. Competence trust is
based upon the various resources and capabilities of the firm. Resources may include
capital, human resources, physical properties, market power and technology, and it is
16 Risk and offshore outsourcing of accounting
these resources and capabilities that provide the basis for the competence or expertise
that is needed in alliances (Das and Teng, 2001 p258). A reputation for competence is
tantamount to low performance risk. Competence trust founded on experience or
reputation, may provide a firm with sufficient confidence to outsource even the highest
performance risk activities offshore such as cash forecasting or other activities involving
analysis and judgement. However, Das and Teng point out that competence trust
does not act to reduce relational risk, being concerned only with the ability to do
appropriate things and not the intention to do so. Indeed, a competent firm may
choose to act opportunistically. The institutional bases of trust that are indicative of
competence include those Sarbanes-Oxley, codes of professional ethics, ISO9000, EU
data protection directives and compliance with FSA regulations. This may impact on
relational risk as opportunism is less likely if partners are in the same professional body,
due to reputation effects and potential for disciplinary action.
Das and Teng (2001) discuss how formal control of outputs and behaviour, if considered
excessive, may be to the detriment of goodwill trust. Close monitoring of behaviour
and/or outputs may generate tension, making partners sceptical of each others intention
and compromising competence trust. Social control, in contrast, may boost goodwill and
competence trust as the partners influence each others behaviour through frequent
meetings and communications, culture blending, and socialisation (p264) and develop
shared norms, a step that indicates the partners competence is trusted. Thus, a clients
trust in a vendors goodwill and competence impact on the effectiveness of control.
Findings
We observed the building of goodwill trust to reduce the likelihood of opportunism and
the building of competence trust to reduce performance risk. This trust was manifested
in the Ardon directors friendship with the Technoaccounts director and the pair
exchanged regular conversations on the telephone. He told us that he believed that the
Technoaccounts director was basically honest and had integrity. The Ardon director
even considered investing in Technoaccounts as he believed that the company was
robust and likely to generate returns. Small firms often have limited resources to
engage in extensive control. The Ardon director had a high level of goodwill trust in
the Technoaccounts director which mitigated relational and performance risk and, while
there was also a high level of competence trust, this was reducing as Technoaccounts had
reneged on certain promises. Table 2.10 explains more about Ardons reliance on trust.
Table 2.10: Small firm outsourcing practices at ArdonTechnoaccounts
In 2006, Ardon was a relative veteran of offshore outsourcing having outsourced
to India since late 90s and was cognisant of some of the risks (eg, data loss,
natural disaster).
Contact costs and performance risks were mitigated by recommendations of
existing users enabling competence trust. Potential for vendor opportunism was
mitigated by goodwill trust expressed in the growing friendship between the
directors and regular informal communication between staff in both firms. Ardon
did not have the resources to engage in a full due diligence process or engage in
extensive India travel, risk analysis and tendering as in the large firm examples.
Technoaccounts provided labour, standardised service and used IT effectively to
reduce client-side control costs to a minimum. They have enabled Ardon to
overcome skills shortages; focus on core competences with their clients and freeze
price increases.
The cost savings of Indian offshore outsourcing were not greater than could be
achieved with outsourcing to a UK firm, which can be explained by the relatively
low volume of outsourced transactions.
3.1 Governance
3.1.1 Contract
The contract between Alphacorp and BetaCom involves open book gain sharing, which
is based on operating cost reimbursement and sharing of savings against an agreed
baseline. The baseline cost is the pre-contract cost incurred by Alphacorp for the
contracted services. Any differences between actual BetaCom costs and baseline costs
(savings) are shared between Alphacorp and BetaCom in the proportion agreed in
the contract. BetaCom achieves a margin by supplying services below baseline cost,
generally by improving processes, and by optimising the use of lower cost locations.
The contract with Alphacorp states that BetaCom must pursue process improvements
and cost reductions. In other words, the gain-sharing contract commits both client and
vendor to continuous improvement, with both partners sharing in the cost savings.
One example is BetaComs implementation of imaging and workflow technologies,
which result in faster entry of invoice details and a significant resource reduction.
The Alphacorp contract manager told us that the spirit of the contract between
Alphacorp and BetaCom rests on a mutually beneficial commercial relationship, which is
continually driving cost down and improving quality. He believes the contract motivates
BetaCom to perform, manage, and deliver accordingly. Two quotes below summarise
his views:
I think the main protection is the contract, and the behaviour in the relationship thats
inherent in that contract. If you have a contract that youre comfortable is going to work,
incentivises the right sort of behaviour and contributes to a win-win partnership behaviour
its hard to go wrong if youre devoted partners.
The essence of the deal is to share savings between the partners based on the extent to
which the actual vendor costs come in below the baseline. The baseline represents the
cost of the outsourced activities immediately prior to the contract commencement.
This mechanism was designed to ensure that both parties profited from lower operating
costs (lower revenues to the vendor but higher profit) and that the right behaviours
would be incentivised. Previous contracts with a mark up margin based on revenue
had incentivised the vendor to increase revenue in order to increase margin and in the
absence of an effective gain share mechanism Alphacorp costs would not come down.
The relationship is based on performance and performance is based on-year-on year lower
costs, improving quality and a sound control environment. Contract manager, Alphacorp.
BetaCom
(Portugal)
(T2)
BetaCom
(India)
(T3)
The first tier (T1) consists of regional groups such as the European group, Americas
group, Australasian group, South African group, and other groups around the world.
T1 refers to BetaCom staff co-located with Alphacorp which is rarely practiced.
The second tier (T2) is a series of European centres in relatively low cost locations where
the required qualified resources (especially language skills) are available. In this case,
T2 refers to BetaCom (Portugal), which performs transactional accounting processing
for Alphacorp in the UK, Spain, Portugal, and France. Since the transition of work to the
India centre, the role of Portugal has gradually changed to co-ordination of the India
centre and managing the relationship with Alphacorp. Portugal staff review and control
the quality of work from India before delivering it to Alphacorp. The third tier (T3)
consists of the global location, and the focus is India. T3 is a cost centre, and their staff
do not interact directly with the client although this is changing as a greater amount of
English language work from Alphacorp is being sent directly to India, thus bypassing
tier 2. The communication between the staff in each tier is mainly through emails and
telephone as well as via the in-house designed document management system (DMS).
BetaCom has adopted the client accounting systems including SUN, SAP Financials and
ORACLE release 11.
3.1.3 Meetings
Our governance model is the most important part of the relationship. It ensures that at
each level there are conversations, supported by relevant data, with knowledgeable people
from both parties present. The escalation rules are a way of ensuring that issues are dealt
with promptly and the data is to ensure that facts can be agreed between the parties.
Contract manager, Alphacorp.
The top-level governance committee is the joint review group (JRG), which deals
with strategic issues escalated from the lower level committees. Overall, this level of
governance is designed to assess whether the overall relationship delivers against
expectations. The European operation network (EON) is the second level governance
group and is focussed on the level of contract across all countries of operation
considering service quality, control environment, and budgets as well as escalations
from the in country day-to-day activities. The EON takes guidance and occasionally
instruction from the JRG. The operational level of governance is concerned with the
day-to-day issues. The day-to-day interaction between client and vendor is through
telephone, email, or visits to Alphacorp centres.
Governance meetings at the three levels (JRG, EON and operational level) are maintained
as physically co-present and face-to-face, rather than mediated by technology such as
video conferencing. Thus representatives travel from each location for the EON and JRG
and there is regular travel of Portugal-based staff for operational level meetings with
Alphacorp. As well as language ability, proximity to the client is a major reason for the
continued existence of the Portugal hub.
3.2 Risks
3.2.1 Relational risks
The potential for opportunism in this case is significant involving potential for poaching
of systems, poaching of staff, fraud and renegotiation. Some of the material discussed
20 Alphacorp and BetaCom
below concerns the transition stage of outsourcing. We indicate this where appropriate,
as events at that stage do not reflect normal ongoing business in India. Rather, they
reflect a transition phase where issues were expected and were managed with extra
monitoring and staff.
Poaching of systems or processes
When outsourcing, there is potential for opportunism where the vendor may use
information about the clients for their own benefit. An interviewee in Portugal
highlighted the possibilities of using Alphacorps systems or processes for vendor
promotion to new clients:
If the next big oil company comes to us then we will be able to say well actually we do
this for GlobalOil, we do this for Alphacorp, it may well be you want something similar.
Service manager, BetaCom (Portugal).
Aron et al. (2005) indicate the possibility that vendors could act opportunistically by
developing expertise from the clients operation and transferring it to the clients
competitor(s). It was observed that BetaCom (India) serves a number of clients in the
same building, thus presenting potential for opportunistic poaching. Alphacorps contract
manager told us:
Our expectation is that we would be acting in a way thats to our mutual advantage and
BetaCom would find itself in some very difficult conversations if it were dealing with other
clients to our cost. Contract manager, Alphacorp.
Interviewees on both sides of the relationship stressed that Alphacorp has outsourced
only back office transactional activity which tends to be of a generic nature offering
little in the way of competitive advantage if copied. Clients are often happy with the
arrangement in offshore centres if it allows the vendor to increase scale and reduce
fixed cost allocations to the client so long as only generic process is shared where no
discernable competitive advantage will be gained or lost. Many multinationals are
using common ERP platforms such as SAP with little difference between the back office
processes across users.
Poaching of staff
High attrition level of staff in India, monotonous work and limited career development
could contribute to the potential for opportunistic poaching of staff. Several BetaCom
interviewees confirmed the attrition level in India as 14% per annum, with the industry
average being 35% to 40%. Several interviewees told us that the work is monotonous as
it focuses only on specific processing activities that over time, becomes unexciting to the
staff, and presents no challenge to those with MBA or bachelors degrees, a typical level of
attainment of BetaCom staff on Alphacorp accounts. Several interviewees reported their
views of this:
You cannot expect people doing the same job for 15 years even if they do the highest of
jobs in the value chain. They are not going to stay. Finance manager, BetaCom (India).
Its a high turnover industry. We have a lot of other competing processing firms around
this place and so, it is a challenge to keep people motivated here. You have people who
are doing MBA finance, doing the same kind of role as people who have a bachelor in
communication. The level of interest in that particular role is different. There is some
monotony in the whole process so you need to keep the employees motivated. Human
resource executive, BetaCom (India).
A common strategy is moving staff around to different accounts to keep the work varied.
However, key BetaCom employees on Alphacorp accounts cannot be transferred to other
contracts without the prior agreement of the Alphacorp contract manager (which is not
unreasonably withheld). High staff turnover introduces quality issues because staff have
to be hired and trained which presents a time lag before performance is achieved. We
were told:
If we lost any of our nominated key people because they (BetaCom) put them on
somebody elses account without first getting my agreement then that would be a breach
of the contract. Contract manager, Alphacorp.
Fraud
BetaCom transferring part of Alphacorp transactional processing work to India may have
added to the risk of fraud. India has been reported as having a relatively high level of
corruption and no equivalent law to the UK on data protection. Additionally, some
security experts suggest that low paid labour may be more likely to engage in corrupt
activities (BBC News, 2005). However, the Alphacorp contract manager felt that India
presented no greater risk than anywhere else:
In developing countries the need for a job is far stronger than the need for a job in the
UK and therefore the temptation to break the law and risk losing your job is probably less.
I dont think that living and working in a developing country really makes a difference to
peoples honesty and integrity. Contract manager, Alphacorp.
The operation manager in BetaCom (India) also took the same view as the Alphacorp
contract manager, believing that India presents no heightened risk:
I dont think the risk will be any greater since you are dealing with people, you are
susceptible to fraud in India, and you are susceptible to fraud in Portugal, or the UK or
Bangkok or anywhere. Operation manager, BetaCom (India).
Low levels of perceived risk can be attributed to chunkification. The contract manager is
careful to ensure that only transactions offering limited potential for relational or
performance risk are outsourced.
Renegotiation
If there are few qualified suppliers in the industry, the vendor might act opportunistically
during negotiations since if the client has no alternative, then the client must accept the
terms that the vendor offers (Aron et al. 2005 p43). It was mentioned by one of the
interviewees in BetaCom (Portugal) that Alphacorp no longer has in-house resources to
perform accounting work.
Transactional accounting has been outsourced for such a long time now. Alphacorp would
have difficulty manning the project with in-house resources because the in-house resources
no longer have knowledge of what accounting is required. Project manager, BetaCom
(Portugal).
Back office processes such as those outsourced to BetaCom can be relatively easily
transferred between suppliers due to generic processes and a large number of qualified
suppliers. Thus, although the work would be unlikely to be insourced back into
Alphacorp, the potential for opportunistic vendor renegotiation is limited in such
scenarios.
Communication
Although English is the de facto internal language of BetaCom, it is not the first language
for staff in India or Portugal. Interviewees reported that they experience difficulty in
communicating in English when using email and the telephone. This problem often
causes misunderstanding, and delays the process, as one Portugal-based executive stated:
We have some language problems. Sometimes its difficult for them [Indian team] to
understand me, and sometimes I have difficulty in understanding their accents. We speak
English but its not our first language. Customer service executive, BetaCom (Portugal).
The level of our Portugal-based interviewees English was clearly apparent during the
interviews and it became clear that not all of the BetaCom (Portugal) employees were
fully competent in English. We were also informed that they could not express their
knowledge or explain instructions clearly to the team in India. At the same time, these
interviewees complained that the team in India was not competent in English, French,
Dutch, Spanish, or Portuguese, and thus had difficulty understanding instructions or
explanations from the Portugal team. One of the interviewees in BetaCom (India)
explained:
People in Portugal do not know English very well. There might have been some
miscommunication on the way they [team in Portugal] express things and what we
[team in India] think. Team leader, BetaCom (India).
A further complexity concerned public holidays which are at different times in the UK,
Portugal, and India. Although the office in Portugal works to the UK schedule, festival
periods in India present bottlenecks at holiday periods. During these times, the number
of people working on a given process in India would be reduced.
There was an agreement that there has to be one person in India during holidays there.
We always ensure that there was a minimum of service that needs to be provided.
Customer service executive, BetaCom (Portugal).
Such difficulties are overshadowed by the reported problems during initial set up where
there were significant difficulties in arranging for telecommunications links to be
established. Even for a global firm such as BetaCom, we were told:
It took significantly longer and incurred more executive effort than expected to establish
effective telecommunications and far beyond the norm in USA. Senior manager, BetaCom.
Alphacorp and BetaCom 23
BetaCom organises country-based teams for activities such as tax, statutory accounting
and general ledger. Other processing teams are cross country where processes are
regarded as standard. However, according to the BetaCom operational manager, the
input for transactional processing that is sent to BetaCom is often not standardised.
For example, the invoices are in different shapes, sizes and forms. Some of the invoices
are either not properly coded or approved by the client.
One interviewee commented that the team in India do not display the same sense of
urgency as the team members in Portugal. A reason given for this was that the Indian
staff do not communicate directly with Alphacorp staff and in the event of a difficulty
they are somewhat removed from the intensity of the front line of customer support:
I dont believe they have the same sense of urgency as we have, because they dont have
the clients pressurising them. Project manager, BetaCom (Portugal).
Some knowledge was impossible to formalise into training and could only be gained
through experience. An example was detecting errors in reconciliation: work which
requires experience. One of the Portugal-based operatives told us:
During reconciliation when they take the report of some accounts, some figures are
there but they should not be ... which could only be identified if you have the experience
of doing it that is the kind of thing that they [Bangalore team] have to understand.
Team leader, BetaCom (Portugal).
3.3.1 Chunkification
We observed horizontal chunkification based on Alphacorps decision to outsource
predominantly rules-based transactions, and maintaining critical business tasks in house.
By maintaining some internal competence, Alphacorp reduces strategic dependence on
any one vendor. Categories of transactional processing are approved by Alphacorp prior
to being outsourced as codifiable.
Theres judgement that goes into whether we keep it [accounting services] in house,
sometimes outsource or never outsource. So generally the scope we outsource is safe to
outsource because it is mostly rules based. Contract manager, Alphacorp.
24 Alphacorp and BetaCom
Alphacorp has a second vendor, Vendor B which performs transactional processing work
for Alphacorp subsidiaries in other geographical areas. By maintaining a second vendor,
Alphacorp prevents the possibility of contract loss due to poor performance and mitigates
against opportunistic behaviour by building a competitive environment for the vendors.
You could suffer because one or other party had to walk away from the deal or one party
was cutting so many corners to meet costs that the quality suffered. It's never happened
because we create mutually beneficial economic relationships with each supplier and have
the ability to leverage across both suppliers. Contract manager, Alphacorp.
The size of Alphacorp is significant for control as Alphacorp is one of the worlds largest
companies. Alphacorp is in a strong position to influence or negotiate with its supplier,
thus deterring opportunism:
Were in a good position because were a big buyer and we get attention from suppliers.
Both our suppliers rely on Alphacorp for a part of their future business and we know theyre
going to give us a good service. Contract manager, Alphacorp.
The two suppliers are not directly compared nor does Alphacorp threaten a poorly
performing vendor with moving revenue to the other vendor. Alphacorp does not
demand from service providers based on size and buying power.
We were also told by one of the interviewees in BetaCom (India) about how the SLA
was broken into separate statements of work:
We have a statement of work that ties into the overall contract, which details out
everything I need to do and deliver. I have seen the SLA agreements that explain what
I have to comply with to make sure the processes are healthy. Operation manager,
BetaCom (India).
Staffing
During the transition process from BetaCom (Portugal) to BetaCom (India) in 2004,
full-time employees were hired in India according to levels of experience and
qualifications. It was agreed between BetaCom and Alphacorp that tier 3 would be a
multi-client centre. BetaCom cannot remove assigned staff, individuals holding key
positions identified in the contract, from the Alphacorp account. This mitigates potential
for opportunistic behaviour of the vendor moving inexperienced staff onto the account.
Trusted staff working on areas where fraud could take place would not be rotated or
replaced by unknown personnel. Alphacorp is not involved in BetaCom recruitment but
has the contractual right to request removal of any person working on the Alphacorp
account. This right is intended to maintain staff with competence to complete the
work assigned thus mitigating performance risk. Crucial to the process are inter firm
conversations, meaning dialogue:
So we had a conversation with BetaCom. Okay, you bring in all the customers you want
to Bangalore but you cannot take away anybody without a good conversation, anyone
that weve agreed is a key person. We engage in conversation with BetaCom about their
recruitment methods, about whether they access references or whether theyve had people
who have left who have fraud convictions. Occasionally we will ask them to remove
somebody, who we deem to be unsuitable for the job. Contract manager, Alphacorp.
Alphacorp has never requested the removal of any BetaCom staff in Bangalore. Each
year an ethics certification is obtained from BetaCom detailing (among other items) any
staff who have left because they have broken laws or committed fraud but prior years
certifications show that no staff committed fraud.
BetaCom (India) hiring policy includes reference checks, academic records, checking the
previous employers recommendation, and for senior staff consulting a published blacklist
produced by Nasscom. The Nasscom blacklist, we were told, shows names of individuals
who are regarded as having bad conduct in their work. Although only more senior staff
are recorded, a central aim of this list is to help to mitigate the risk of fraudulent activity.
We have reports that are published as part of Nasscom, which is one of the governing
bodies for the IT enabled services industry to which we belong to. Here we publish
people who are blacklisted because they are of bad conduct in their work, they are not
trustworthy. Human resource executive, BetaCom (India).
BetaCom have in place staff reward and job rotation schemes to recognise achievement.
There are schemes to move staff to new roles and assignments after a certain period to
provide new knowledge and experience thus reducing boredom and enhancing the
motivation of staff to stay longer in the vendor company.
We have awards based on different criteria, and last month there were around 25 people
who were awarded a total of US$135,000. After a certain period, they are moving to
different roles, different assignments so they know the entire job. Human resource
executive, BetaCom (India).
With regard to knowledge retention and the impact of attrition, staff are instructed to
document their work. A process simulation software package records the details of the
task undertaken by the employee thus minimising the impact of attrition.
Training
At the time of transition, employees from India were given training in Portugal for six
weeks. Additionally, a team from Portugal travelled to India before and during the
transition to ensure that processing systems worked as required. Training was given in
groups or individually:
Theres a combination of classroom training on what Alphacorp wanted to make sure that
everybody knew, the packages and procedures. They [the trainers] sat with the people that
were currently doing it (the task) and had everything explained to them such as how to
recognise an invoice for rent as opposed to an invoice for oil or whatever using their
keywords etc. Project manager, BetaCom (Portugal).
There was also language training for Indian staff in Portuguese, Spanish, and French to
mitigate communication risk. Several interviewees told us that they were provided with
a language database containing 150 to 200 commonly used words translated from
Portuguese, Spanish, and French into English. However, as we were told by one of the
interviewees in BetaCom (Portugal) there were problems with the list of key words, which
were found to be insufficient and incomplete. Staff in India had difficulties with words
outside of the key terms provided and solving the problem had some impact on
Alphacorp:
They [Alphacorp] had to understand that T3 didnt speak Portuguese, French or Spanish
and would only have a list of so many words which they would understand. So if you
wanted to write instructions directly to them, then try to use the key words rather than
some variation of it, because otherwise they wont understand it. So there was some
education for the clients and some of them didnt like that and this is where client pushback
came in. Alphacorp staff said Why should I change what I do just because you sent it to
India? Project manager, BetaCom (Portugal).
The troublesome requirement for Alphacorp staff to write clear instructions became,
at a later date, a requirement within the implementation of control processes to meet
Sarbanes-Oxley control objectives.
Reporting
The reporting structure defines how control is spread throughout the organisation.
The formal reporting structure between Alphacorp and BetaCom involves governance
meetings as discussed above. The reporting structure is augmented with a query log and
key incident report. The key incident report is produced in the event of a problem and
contains a definition, remedial action and agreement by both sides. The Alphacorp
contract manager explains how the key incident report helps to mitigate performance
risk:
We have a reporting process whereby Alphacorp asks BetaCom to create a key incident
report where the facts are included; the facts are agreed about who did what, what are the
root causes and how were going to prevent recurrence. These are logged, monitored and
discussed at the quarterly meetings so we can see were learning from our lessons and were
not repeating the same mistakes. Contract manager, Alphacorp.
when not attended preventing unauthorised staff from viewing records. There are also
system security mechanisms such as creation, validation, maintenance of staff identity,
firewall and anti-virus protection all of which is periodically reviewed and reported to
Alphacorp. Other measures designed to reduce fraud risk include segregation of duties
(SOD) between several staff members so no single person has access to information that
may lead to a fraud. Monthly system generated reports show all instances where a user
has an access profile with SOD violations. These reports are provided to Alphacorp and
the Alphacorp contract manager approves all unmitigated violations. The problem of
collusion between several people to commit fraud is a generally recognised threat to
security in India and elsewhere.
Audit
An external audit is performed by Alphacorps external auditors on the transactional
processing performed by BetaCom.
Alphacorp had their auditors flown in to India to do a complete process check for the
existing controls and the weakness, recommendations and so on. Finance manager,
BetaCom (India).
Silent running
Silent running, or lack of, is a proxy measure of how successful BetaCom is performing
in the eyes of the community of Alphacorp businesses. Essentially, if there is no noise
(complaints about cost, quality or controls) from Alphacorp, then it is assumed until there
is evidence to the contrary, that BetaCom is meeting Alphacorp expectations and has
achieved silent running. The evaluation of silent running is mainly by informal means
and we interpret the central value of silent running as a social control to encourage
the alignment of the goals, attitudes and values of the client and vendor. However,
assuming silent running could be misleading if Alphacorp staff are too busy to complain.
The Alphacorp contract manager expressed some dangers in overreliance on silent
running without objective evidence or metrics in support:
Its silent because no ones criticising BetaCom performance, and no ones sticking it up on
the wall and saying this is broken. If silent running is not being achieved, my first priority is
to restore it. If it stayed broken I would not be able to go after other objectives because I
would be constantly involved in fixing silent running and getting people comfortable with
BetaCom performance. Contract manager, Alphacorp.
However, this had an unexpected consequence as we were told that one seconded
Alphacorp employee became a staunch defender of BetaCom staff in the Portugal
centre against Alphacorp complaints. However, secondees being a part of the BetaCom
management team allowed the outsourcing relationship to develop beyond a service
provider client relationship as secondments were an important factor in trust building.
Processes such as staff recruitment and data security were also key mechanisms for trust
building:
We have a lot of faith in BetaComs recruitment processes, their experience so far, and how
well they treat their people. I think BetaCom keeps our data as safe in India as they do in
the USA, Europe or elsewhere. Its the same systems, same technology, same access, same
access controls, and same management processes and philosophy. Contract manager,
Alphacorp.
control and trust building which theory would predict as normally only associated with
outsourcing higher value activity is in place in an effort to instil a close partnership.
Table 3.1: Summary of the analysis
Control
mechanism
Risk
Chunkification
Poaching of staff,
systems processes
Fraud
Vendor hold up
Communication
Multiple vendors
Three tier architecture
Routine generic rule-based transactions
only outsourced
Rules on offshore-able scope
Output control
Performance
Contracting KPI/SLA/OLA
Key incident reporting
Internal control manual
Contract gainsharing
Audit
Behaviour
control
Attrition
Fraud
Communication
Culture difference
Knowledge
SLA/OLA
Governance meetings
Training
Secondments
Standards, audit
Security
Training, job rotation
Contractual stipulations eg, on
staff blacklists
Social control
Relational and
performance
Silent running
Secondments
Open book contracting
Governance meetings
Trust
(goodwill and
competence)
Relational and
performance
Secondments
Processes and standards
Continuing track record
4.1 Governance
4.1.1 Contract
The first outsourcing contract was signed in 2004 and comprised a seven-year agreement
of approximately 30 million. Outsourcing is governed by an open contract based
on cost plus pricing. The contract contains an SLA with comprehensive KPIs providing
measurements of IndiBackOffices delivery performance. Service credit is applied in the
contract as a penalty for vendor failure to reach KPIs.
Gowing mitigated risk of poor vendor performance risk by phasing the migration of
accounting to IndiBackOffice. The first transition of staff from Gowing to IndiBackOffice
involved transfer of approximately 200 Gowing employees to IndiBackOffice who
remained based in the UK. In this stage, outsourced accounting services included
accounts receivable, accounts payable overheads, accounts payable overseas, principal
ledger, financial reporting, cash management, applications management and support.
The first activities transferred to India involved accounts payable, payroll business
expenses, cash management and principal ledger. In late 2004, IndiBackOffice (UK)
transferred the entire remaining transaction processes to India. This involved receiving
input, loading the input, processing the payment, and sending out payment advice.
The transition arrangements from Gowing to IndiBackOffice (India) began mid 2004,
starting with recruitment and staff training in India, replication and testing of the
systems and processes from IndiBackOffice (UK). In mid 2005, the contract was extended
by approximately 10 million over the next six years involving a further 210 people
transferred to IndiBackOffice (UK).
The contract manager made frequent telephone calls to check on progress (three
to four per day) to IndiBackOffice in India and the UK and had frequent presence in the
IndiBackOffice (India) centre. There was a recognition from IndiBackOffice staff that the
Gowing contract managers knowledge and experience of Gowing operations had been
helpful at inception of outsourcing and subsequently. The Gowing contract manager was
regarded by many in India as part of the team and over time came to be regarded
as an ally. Her position as a trusted senior Gowing manager with political influence on
Gowings most senior management enabled convincing explanation of IndiBackOffices
problems without suspicion. The contract manager also enabled change in Gowings
own internal processes where appropriate. Her deep involvement in Gowing and
IndiBackOffices day-to-day and strategic operations helped her to see beyond simple
output controls and act bi-directionally to extend improvements into Gowing and the
vendor. An IndiBackOffice India-based manager told us:
[the Gowing contract manager] is trying to highlight the weaknesses in the Gowing
business that are causing us problems so we can do things quicker and better. When its
Gowing who are holding us up, then shes prepared to take that back. Operation manager,
IndiBackOffice (UK).
On one of her frequent visits to India, the Gowing contract manager would hold
meetings and training sessions, talk to managers and other staff, and identify issues to
be taken to IndiBackOffice (UK) and to Gowing. Thus, she acted as a bridge to mutual
understanding between the two firms and occasionally between the respective Indian
and UK parts of the vendor organisation. Two IndiBackOffice staff gave their views
emphasising the bi-directional approach to problem solving:
She comes here and looks at the service delivery, the metrics, and any areas that need
improvement. Team leader, IndiBackOffice (India).
Typically, she will come here and tell us the issues the UK people feel they are facing with
India. We will give answers for that. We will also give her a list of issues which we are facing
here. Finance director, IndiBackOffice (India).
The contract manager was a key person in Gowing who could use her skills and personal
networking across the three sites of Gowing, IndiBackOffice (UK) and IndiBackOffice
(India) to drive changes in the process within client and vendor sides of the relationship.
She would manage the outsourcing contract but also work personally and often
informally with IndiBackOffice UK and India staff to bring a sense of mutually shared
objectives, to improve transactional and higher value added processes, and to solve
communication and cultural issues between both sides.
Key vendor personnel
An Indian executive at IndiBackOffice (UK) was employed due to a perceived need in
IndiBackOffice (UK) to minimise cultural problems between the British and Indian teams.
We brought Amit to the UK. He is from Sri Lanka, and knows a lot about Indian culture.
He is going to be a key link for us in terms of helping us with some of the cultural issues.
Client director, IndiBackOffice (UK).
The India centre manager, Sundeep, plays an important role in overcoming staff attrition,
building competence trust and ensuring service delivery to IndiBackOffice (UK) and
Gowing. Gowing are outsourcing more than simple routine processes which requires a
different skill set of senior leaders:
Basic process control is a legacy but for todays outsourcing you need people like Sundeep
to be always questioning the process. How can things be changed and flexibility added?
New client director, IndiBackOffice (UK).
This persons leadership style, manner, and communication skills were regarded as
important in managing the relationship between Gowing, IndiBackOffice (UK) and staff
in India. Individuals such as the Gowing contract manager and India centre manager
provide a bridge to mutual understanding between India and the UK and these
individuals were critical to the success of the relationship. However, it was recognised that
reliance on a few individuals is problematic and an interviewee in Gowing (UK) told us
that expatriates who could manage operations and mitigate cultural issues between the
British and Indian teams would be transferred to the India centre in the future. What was
proposed was similar to the secondments in the previous case:
We want to see a more permanent presence of the UK managers in India not necessarily
running the operations but just being visible and helping with the cultural issues and the
relationship. IndiBackOffice manager (UK).
Gowing and IndiBackOffice 33
Contract
Open book contract and participatory governance meetings were regarded as
encouraging mutually shared objectives. For example, the baseline cost contract provides
guidance on how to determine what IndiBackOffice can offer in the future, the cost of
services, and how to share the savings and improve the process. Dynamic attention to
pricing and gain-sharing minimises the risk of opportunistic price increases. The controls
were being renegotiated during the course of our inquiry:
We are in the middle of scoping what the new baseline, service and controls need to be,
measures that we need to have in place to measure success of that process. What it also
does is highlight what the potential improvement opportunities are in terms of cost
reduction, process improvements, that will ultimately drive down the cost price which is
a good thing both for Gowing and us, because we share the savings. Client director,
IndiBackOffice (UK).
Use of such a method allows both client and vendor to develop a consensus on
deterrents against either firm from acting opportunistically. Additionally, such an
approach could also reduce performance risk as it encourages both sides to lay out
reasonable and achievable targets.
An issue log was introduced to solve issues being presented based on hearsay. As one
of the interviewees in IndiBackOffice (UK) told us:
We have got a noise level and it would all be hearsay, you go to a meeting and people
would say, oh this has gone wrong and when I hear that, there would be no factual
evidence. So we introduced an issue log. IndiBackOffice and Gowing raise issues on the
issue log. Operation manager, IndiBackOffice (UK).
attrition is high. Career growth includes moving staff into new client tasks, processes, or
service lines. The Finance director, IndiBackOffice (India) explains:
They (vendor staff) are given a change in terms of moving to a new client, which means
new exposure and an opportunity to travel to the UK adding to career experience. We are
also trying to move people within the processes, within the same client or to a different
service line. Finance director, IndiaBackOffice (India).
IndiBackOffice also has in place an exit policy in order to overcome staff poaching by
other companies. This policy requires an employee to give notice before leaving and to
enforce this IndiBackOffice and other major India-based outsourcers are working with
Indias software and IT-enabled services industry body NASSCOM on a membership
agreement to prohibit poaching of experienced staff. IndiBackOffice (India) also tries to
control attrition through training:
You cannot expect a person to work for you based on what he is presently qualified to do.
His or her expectation is to be offered a capability road map. You have to have a very good
training and development plan for people There are about 40-50 training programmes
we have within the company. Finance director, IndiBackOffice (India).
4.2.4 Trust
Interviewees in IndiBackOffice generally expressed their intention to build and maintain
good relations with the Gowing contract manager. Reporting the true performance and
delivering services beyond the contract were regarded as important in building trust:
At the end of the third year or fourth year we dont have to worry that this contract will go.
We will be very confident that this contract will be retained because the client is very happy
with us. We have contributed more. Finance director, IndiBackOffice (India)
11
A full consideration of the audit cost implications is beyond the scope of this study.
Gowing and IndiBackOffice 35
Gowing had competence trust in IndiBackOffice at the early stage of the contract when
selecting the vendor and this trust has been augmented over time by positive experience
of meeting SLA and vendor adherence to behaviour controls. Goodwill trust has been
augmented by several instances of the vendor going beyond the contract. For example,
IndiBackOffice was able to accommodate an unexpected increase in the number of
Gowing invoices:
Recently, we were asked to process suddenly 30,000 invoices by Gowing. We had to take
extra people from temporary resources. We had to make people work during weekends and
everybody here was willing. The Gowing contract manager said, You guys are just
amazing. Finance director, IndiBackOffice (India).
Chunkification
Phased implementation
IndiBackOffice (UK) provides client management
Output control
KPI, gainsharing
Service credit
Behaviour control
Reporting
Training
Systems audit
Issue log
Exit policy
Security
Social control
Trust (goodwill
and competence)
5.1 Governance
5.1.1 Contract
Technoaccounts have two contracts with their clients. Firstly, the executed sales
agreement contains details of the service agreement, promises and guarantees to
mitigate performance risk. The second contract is the data protection and confidentiality
agreement which is based on UK law and intended to mitigate relational risk. A
Technoaccounts manager told us of the behaviour controls written into the contract:
We enter into an agreement in terms of confidentiality and non-disclosure. We dont allow
part timers to work with us; anybody who is with us is the full-time employee of the
company. We dont employ temporary employees and we dont subcontract work.
Chief financial officer, Technoaccounts.
Technoaccounts have personal insurance cover to mitigate the risk of being sued by a
client so they would in most circumstances remain solvent in the event of a dispute.
CFO
Each of the six team leaders has three to four team members. In addition six data entry
staff help the bookkeepers to input the data. The four account handlers are not all
qualified accountants but form the communications bridge between the team leaders,
bookkeepers and clients. The role of the account handler is to follow the status of
outsourced accounting (known as jobs), deal with client email and telephone
communication and check the work of team leaders. Team leaders review the work
of bookkeepers and perform some of the work themselves. The account handlers
focus is on understanding client needs and daily interaction with clients as all client
communication is though the account handler. Most UKIndia communication takes
place between the Ardon administrators and Technoaccounts account handlers in India
using MSN hotmail chat. Email is also used but less frequently than MSN chat and
telephone communication is rarely used. We were told by the Ardon administrator:
I think Ive spoken to Marion [Technoaccounts account handler] about three times. I think
its more difficult to speak to them than by email. Its much easier to understand by email.
Administrator, Ardon.
The other major tool for communication and data transfer is the web portal, which is
where all work is uploaded to Technoaccounts and control information is available on the
progress of jobs. The MSN chat feature is permanently open on the Ardon administrators
Windows desktop and she would respond immediately to synchronous chat with India
team members.
Eastern India
Arden
Scanned jobs
Technoaccounts
Prepared
accounts
Vendor
portal
Accounts
preparation
Outsourced
scanning
A typical Ardon client would bring computerised or manual records into the Ardon office.
The Ardon administrator checks the records against the last year as Ardon pricing
depends on the records being of a certain standard. The administrator compiles the
information deemed necessary to go to Technoaccounts, which typically comprises
appropriate parts of the cash book, bank statements and the previous years file.
A scanning firm collects the data once a week, scans and returns a CD containing the
records. While the data is being scanned the administrator compiles Technoaccounts
control sheets. The data, control sheets, an estimate of hours to complete the job and
Typically, two weeks after the initial package has been despatched, a pre-posting review
is presented by Technoaccounts. Again, several queries will be presented with the job in a
semi-complete state. The administrator answers the queries, the job is then sent back and
Technoaccounts makes final amendments and returns the final set of accounts. This is
then entered into the Ardon computer system and a meeting is arranged with the end
client to do the tax planning and commercial work; the added value work that Ardon
provides.
5.2 Risks
5.2.1 Relational risks
Switching costs and vendor hold up
The first instance of potential opportunism concerns vendor hold up (price rises) and
high switching costs for Ardon. Over time, Technoaccounts builds up knowledge of the
client, having worked on previous years accounts, thus presenting Technoaccounts with
an advantage over alternative vendors and imposing high switching costs for Ardon. Any
new supplier would be faced with learning the Ardon client accounts, with concomitant
queries and loss of staff time. Technoaccounts may engage in vendor hold up to the limit
of the Ardon estimate of the benefit of remaining with Technoaccounts and the cost of
switching. The problems of reverse transition were very apparent:
If all those jobs now came in and we had to deal with them in house wed have to recruit a
lot more people and theyd be taking up all the office space here and then youd have all
the hassles that come with employing people, sickness and holidays. Administrator, Ardon.
It was not made completely clear what the impact of this failure by Technoaccounts to
abide by the agreement has been. It can be assumed that using the same staff on the
Ardon account continually would build up a stock of knowledge of the various accounts
outsourced, and hence, experienced Technoaccounts staff would have learned from
mistakes and queries thus enabling them to work faster, and reducing the need for
subsequent work at Ardon. Thus dedicated experienced staff would raise fewer queries
and would be unlikely to make the same mistake or query more than once.
These problems may be explained by the context of the Chennai offshore accounting
milieu, which is characterised by high attrition. Firstly, there has been a steep increase in
the volume of work Ardon and other UK firms of chartered accountants have outsourced
offshore to Technoaccounts. The problem of maintaining performance in an environment
of increasing demand incurs capacity management problems common to many small
businesses in an embryonic, dynamic evolving industry. The director at Ardon told us:
They [Technoaccounts] are struggling to cope with the expansion, theyre not delivering on
all the promises that were made, and I dont think thats anything other than theyve just
under-anticipated how fast they were going to grow. Director, Ardon.
The Ardon directors view of Indias massive labour pool and how Ardon and
Technoaccounts can grow together must be examined in relation to recruitment and
retention difficulties in the local Indian context. Far from Technoaccounts being able to
choose from a massive labour pool, they are a small firm competing for staff with large
multinationals, and this predicament often thwarts easy expansion and retention. A
Technoaccounts director told us:
Most multinational corporations have their own back office here. For example IBM and
StanChart have a back office here. Director, Technoaccounts.
Intermingled with this problem was an unexpected consequence for Ardon of acting
as a reference site and advocate for Technoaccounts to other UK firms of chartered
accountants. An Ardon director explains:
I was initially so impressed by Technoaccounts, I have been very vocal in praising them and
a number of people have signed up with them as a direct result of what I have said ... the
risk for this firm is that the service standard that we get from Technoaccounts deteriorates as
they take on more work. That has happened. Director, Ardon.
40 Ardon and Technoaccounts
Thus, a job may be more complex than it may seem on a preliminary assessment. This
causes a dilemma in the level of checking on the UK side before outsourcing. In order to
detect such problems before outsourcing offshore, the job would have to be taken
almost to a stage of completion.
Quality
A significant performance risk faced by offshore outsourcing clients is that of reaching
and maintaining appropriate quality standards. A Technoaccounts manager believed that
offshore outsourcing presented no greater risk than onshore and that the issues faced by
in-house provision are similar:
The overriding issue is quality. We face the same issues as the UK; people get bored, people
get lazy, people make mistakes, and people leave. Manager, Technoaccounts.
It was argued by this interviewee that the issues in India and the UK are similar. However,
Indian firms are subject to higher levels of attrition than in the UK. The nature of work in
the India centre, almost exclusively transactions, renders it harder to offer employees
Ardon and Technoaccounts 41
more sophisticated types of work that might offer higher levels of job satisfaction. This
leads to problems of motivating staff and contributes to attrition. This impact of attrition
is greater on a small firm like Technoaccounts than a large firm employing hundreds or
in some cases thousands. At Technoaccounts the loss of just a few people represents a
significant percentage of the whole.
Typical quality-related problems which arise are caused by time pressure in the India
centre and assumptions made by accountants who are often working on multiple client
accounts with different standards. There were instances of problems associated with tacit
knowledge, knowledge that is practically enacted but difficult to articulate. An example
was given of this:
If a job comes back from Technoaccounts sometimes theyll say well whats this? Its
apparent to us because well say oh building materials or whatever, but they dont know
the supplier. Accounts administrator, Ardon.
A further quality-related problem concerns the expectations of clients who have cost
reduction as an overriding imperative. Compromises on quality are necessary to
accommodate this. A senior Technoaccounts manager explained:
If I charge our client 10 hours, and I take about 20 hours, I produce a perfect job but clients
would not be willing to pay for 20 hours of work. So what we have to do is try to do that
perfect job in 10 hours. The quality issue is really the single greatest issue that we face as
accounting outsourcing vendors. As we expand rapidly, our staff that are trained then are
put under time pressure but this is exactly the same in the UK. Its like having a January
deadline, and everyone working 22 hours a day to meet the January deadline. Director,
Technoaccounts.
Our interpretation of the behaviour of these sleeping clients is that they are building
up competence trust in Technoaccounts very gradually and mitigating relational and
performance risk in this way. The behaviour of these firms is similar to the behaviour
of early adopters of software offshore outsourcing: start small, outsource non-critical
processes to test for opportunism and adequate performance.
Building trust with constant communications
The almost constant communications between Ardon and Technoaccounts using the
chat forum contributes to goodwill and competence trust and thereby mitigates both
forms of risk. Technoaccounts implementation of customer relationship management
(CRM) software may be understood as impacting on competence trust. We were told by
a Technoaccounts team leader:
The CRM package means that every time I make a phone call to the client, Ill look for the
client record and look at the last five phone calls, and see what we say to them and look at
the feedback. Team leader, Technoaccounts.
Some clients may find this honesty contributes to goodwill trust thereby mitigating
relational risk.
5.3.2 Chunkification
A particular control problem is related to the number of queries Technoaccounts staff
make to Ardon which caused an unexpected administrative overhead. The Ardon
administrator commented:
They are bombarding us with a huge number of little queries, which require my team to
dig out files and go through invoices if they want clarification on how to do something. For
example, we had a difficult job a couple of weeks ago where the client was an investment
business and Technoaccounts werent sure how to work out the list from the spreadsheet
wed given them. So I literally gave them guidelines, look at this column, look at that
column, and pick these bits out. Administrator, Ardon.
The decision on which activities will be sent to Technoaccounts is based on the nature of
the job, its volume, size and how straightforward it is deemed to be. Straightforward
jobs were regarded as the most structured, codifiable tasks, where queries would be
unlikely and only these are sent to India:
We will decide if a job is straightforward in which case it can go to Technoaccounts. If there
are likely to be significant queries because of the nature of the job or the size, or the volume
of transactions, we will undertake the work in house. Director, Ardon.
There are some very definite areas that Ardon staff told us would not be outsourced to
Technoaccounts. This strategy is adopted to mitigate relational risk, mainly potential
opportunistic poaching:
We havent got them on forecasting yet. Weve kept that in house at the moment. I think
its because of the limitations of the software that we use. I dont think [Ardon director]
would be happy to let that go over to Technoaccounts because Technoaccounts are dealing
with other accountancy firms. He wants to make sure our software package isnt used by
anyone else. Accounts administrator, Ardon.
There were plans expressed by senior Ardon staff to move other activities to
Technoaccounts such as corporate tax, payroll, VAT and quarterly management accounts
in the future.
However, as previously mentioned, suing an individual in the Indian courts is often a slow
and cumbersome process.
Data security in India
Risk of data loss as a result of frequent power failure is mitigated by a UPS installed in
Technoaccounts Chennai offices and a generator starts after a few minutes of UPS backup
in the event of a longer power cut. To mitigate risk of fraud and identity theft, data is
transferred via a secure FTP server and a backup line is installed. Behaviour control
in the form of policies prohibiting non-business email and online chat are in place in
employment contracts. Physical security controls are installed including the removal of
CD writer drives from computers and complete removal of floppy drives and USB ports.
The internet firewall prevents access beyond named sites. The potential for loss of data in
the result of disaster is minimised by multiple backups. Another key concern is posting
of jobs to incorrect clients but the software for job posting incorporates a structure to
prevent clients receiving the wrong job:
Whatever jobs are there will be listed, so once you do some work that job name will come
on the top. You cannot post missing info of Y job on X. So that way its pretty safe. IT
manager, Technoaccounts.
A security guard is employed on the door of the building who we were told by several
interviewees randomly checks employees for writing materials, CDs, cameras and mobile
phones on entry and exit.
their vendor. They trusted the recommendation of other Technoaccounts users (trust in
the competence of Technoaccounts) and then relied on personal relations and regular
communication between the staff in both firms to develop goodwill trust. However,
service has been variable as the vendor has struggled to cope with expansion and
attrition. Some contractual promises have been broken and Ardon have had to improvise
solutions (adding extra controls, outsourcing only straightforward jobs). The case shows
how trust which mitigates risk can go into reverse in the event of a regression in trust
caused by reneging on promises for example. This will lead to implementation of
compensatory controls or the search for alternatives.
Table 5.1: Summary of the analysis
Control
mechanism
Risk
Chunkification
Cost of control
Queries, errors
High attrition in India
Output control
Quality errors
Reneging
Behaviour
control
Non-standard
practices of clients
and staff
Problem of hidden
complexity
Attrition
Fraud
Training
Job tracking
Fraud and data security procedures
Rules of IRIS
Non-disclosure agreements
ISO9001
Staff overcapacity
Trust
(goodwill and
competence)
Switching costs
Vendor hold up
Sleeping clients
Recommendations from industry conference
Regression of trust leads to control
implementation.
Generation of goodwill through good
personal relations between staff in both
firms particularly using MSN chat.
6.1 Risk
Despite the institutional differences, interviewees across the case studies on client and
vendor sides of the relationship perceived that Indian vendors do not present a greater
risk of opportunistic shirking, reneging, cheating or poaching than vendors in any other
country. There were, however, additional performance risks associated with offshore
outsourcing associated particularly with knowledge transfer, knowledge retention
(managing high levels of attrition) and communication across distance and language.
The experiences of Ardon and Technoaccounts particularly show how small firms with
limited resources face difficulties in managing attrition levels and achieving growth.
6.2 Control
The cases dealt with the risks in many different ways. At AlphacorpBetaCom, only
codifiable transactions are outsourced. Parts of the outsourced accounting are undertaken
in the Portugal hub to minimise risks arising from such impediments as language skills
in India. Accounting would be kept in Portugal and not be migrated to India in cases
where:
Ardon has smaller needs in terms of volume, scope and the type of work outsourced to
India. Some work is kept in house if it presents the need for a personal touch due to
established face-to-face relationships with clients or if the work presents unacceptable
risk of vendor opportunism. The results here concur with Das and Teng (2001) as
behaviour and output control was shown to be used to good effect when the
transactions are codifiable and measurable in the case of lower level accounting functions
(eg, payroll). The results also match the theory in the Gowing case where social control
was used extensively when outsourced transactions involved judgement, were relatively
non-codifiable and contained un-measurable output (eg, process improvement).
However, the results do not concur with theory in the unexpected use of social control
at AlphacorpBetaCom where outsourced transactions were codified, controlled by
output and behaviour control but secondments and silent running were adopted and
considered highly important to outsourcing success. Thus, control decisions made
purely on the characteristics of the transaction alone may be misleading and managers
may consider the introduction of controls such as secondments even for codifiable
transactions where the volumes involved are sufficiently high and where it is expected
the relationship will move to higher value activity over time.
Gowing outsources high value activities to IndiBackOffice and the Gowing contract
managers frequent travel to India and direct involvement in problem solving, sometimes
at a practical operational level, had the effect of inculcating mutual understanding
among staff in the vendors Indian centre and in Gowing (UK). The Alphacorp case study
shows how the middle person role can be taken further involving direct secondment of
client staff to manage the vendor centre.
48 Discussion and conclusions
Gowing IndiBackOffice
Ardon
Technoaccounts
Size of firms
Global
multinationals
Local, small
firms
Volume
number of
transactions
Large
Smallest
Scope (type of
transaction
being
outsourced
Narrow. Only
transactional
processing,
codifiable, rules
based, generic
processes
Codifiable
straightforward
tasks
The control mechanisms observed across the cases can be summarised in the following
table:
Table 6.2: Control and trust mechanisms across the case studies to mitigate risk
Control and trust
mechanism
Governance
Behaviour control
SLA/OLA
Reporting
Staffing and training
Physical and systems security
Audit
Standards and policies
Internal control manual
Output control
KPIs/Service credits
Social control
Silent running
Secondments
Regular visits of middle person as bridges to mutual
understanding
Personality and skills of middle person
Chunkification
Trust
6.3 Trust
Ardon had a high level of trust in the goodwill and competence of Technoaccounts to
mitigate relational and performance risk. However, trust is regressing as Technoaccounts
renege on certain promises. Small client firms do not have the resources to engage in a
full due diligence process or impose controls in the way the large firms in the sample
do. Small firms may rely to a greater extent on the controls provided by the vendor to
mitigate relational and performance risks. The vendors goodwill could not overcome the
problems they experienced with staff attrition in India. Subsequently, the case shows how
trust can go into reverse when the vendor reneged on promises causing Ardon to install
costly controls in the form of checks and audits of the vendor output and even consider
alternative vendors.
The other cases differed in the extent to which trust was seen to mitigate risk.
The AlphacorpBetaCom case study involves a long-term outsourced process. Alphacorp
is one of the pioneers of offshore accounting outsourcing and relationships and processes
are mature. Goodwill trust built on track record and personal relationships derived from
secondments and regular face-to-face co-present meetings act to minimise risks which
include the impact of surveillance of the vendor that such arrangements afford. The
relatively more recently established GowingIndiBackOffice outsourcing arrangement
commenced as a result of a crisis. This relationship moved up the trust curve very
quickly due to the urgency of the need for outsourcing. The actions of the contract
50 Discussion and conclusions
manager have been effective in inculcating a sense of common goals and thus social
control. This has built goodwill trust on both sides shown in the vendor going beyond
the contract to help in crises. The contract manager has also been able to build
competence trust when engaging in surveillance of the vendor. When in India and
during the frequent informal contacts this manager is able to supplement formal output
controls, and check behaviour controls are adhered to both of which minimise
performance risk.
6.4 Discussion
Following Aron and Singh (2005) and Aron et al. (2005), the need to assure effective
risk management by achieving a balance of types and different levels of control and/or
trust can be related to the nature of the tasks outsourced. However, there are limits on
such prescriptive models that present risk related to causal relationships between factors
focussing only on the attributes of transactions. Instead, these cases show how choice of
control can be seen as evolving (eg, trust can go into reverse), to be influenced by local
contextual issues (eg, attrition in India) and attitudes (eg, perceived need for secondment),
and that control and/or trust is shaped by particular historical circumstances (eg,
Alphacorpss long-term vendor relationship) and the actions of individuals and groups
(eg, the Gowing contract manager, Technoaccounts reneging). Effective control of
offshore outsourcing is as much a social process as a technical one. Outsourcing
codifiable processes does not limit control to outputs and behaviour as we observed
social control to be as a major feature of the AlphacorpBetaCom relationship. Managers
thus need to select from an appropriate range of controls based not just on transaction
characteristics alone but the anticipated future of the outsourcing relationship.
Small firms can engage in offshore outsourcing and there is a role for consultants, lawyers
and other intermediaries to assist in providing standardised contracts and guidance at
a reasonable price for small clients. The ArdonTechnoaccounts case is much smaller
in terms of scale and scope than either of the other cases. At Ardon, cost savings were
not a major factor underpinning the decision to outsource to India. Instead, the major
benefit and challenge was seen to lie in standardised output and constant labour supply.
We were told that the savings achieved as a result of outsourcing offshore were roughly
commensurable to outsourcing to UK-based freelance homeworkers and thus dramatic
cost savings were not achieved. This can be explained by considering the relatively small
volumes outsourced compared with Alphacorp or Gowing. Small firms have the potential
to use offshore outsourcing successfully, at Ardon offshore outsourcing led to several
benefits such as a focus on consultancy services for clients. Small firms considering
offshore outsourcing should consider a predefined strategic planning goal beyond cost
savings prior to offshore outsourcing.
Guidance and recommendations on appropriate disclosure of offshore outsourcing
should be provided. Our interviews revealed that some firms of chartered accountants
do not inform their clients that their accounts preparation is outsourced to India.
Vendors should be cognisant of the imperative for risk mitigation and present clients with
a range of controls according to type of work to be outsourced. Clients such as Gowing
which are outsourcing considerably more than simple codifiable generic transactions
expect value added from vendors beyond reduced cost and quality within SLA tolerance
limits. Effective management of such relationships requires client access and active
participation in areas of the vendors operation which might previously have been
considered out of bounds to clients. Clients have responsibilities to vendors too which
can be formally and informally acknowledged, for instance, Alphacorp was governed
by the OLA to enable the vendors SLA. For the control and innovation of higher value
added activities, leadership style and communication skills become as crucial as technical
ability. It is not however the solution for clients to think of BetaCom as an extension
of their accounts department as that may lead to tensions around boundaries and
responsibilities. After all, vendors have responsibilities to many clients. However, the
Gowing case shows that clients expecting more than the processing of generic rulesbased codifiable processes must expect to put a lot of effort into helping vendors get it
right supported by open gainsharing contracts. Vendors in turn must feel motivated to
welcome, encourage and facilitate client access to form close working partnerships.
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