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Outsourcing in Other Areas

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Creation of New Terms and Models. Outsourcing. Offshoring. Globalization. Near-shoring ... (b) Geography-specific (c) Task-specific ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Outsourcing in Other Areas


1
Outsourcing in Other Areas
  • Legal P G
  • Accounting
  • RD
  • Teaching My job can be outsourced!
  • British Rail
  • Italian Passports

2
  • Organizational Issues
  • Intra-organizational, Inter-organizational, or
    Partnership
  • Degree of Coupling
  • Intellectual Property Issues possibility of
    taxing IP exports/imports

3
Creation of New Terms and Models
  • Outsourcing
  • Offshoring
  • Globalization
  • Near-shoring
  • In-sourcing
  • Multi-sourcing
  • Co-sourcing

4
Decision Variables
  • Magnitude of Project
  • Complexity of Effort
  • Criticality of Endeavor
  • Duration and Potential Repeatability
  • Degree of Need for Scalability
  • Cost Considerations
  • Preference for Host Environments Social,
    Economic, Political, Skill-Level, Language

5
Potential Locations
6
Evaluating Potential for Offshoring
  • Temporal and Spatial Considerations
  • Balance between Automation and Labor
  • Degree of Proximity Needed with Suppliers,
    Co-Contractors, and Buyers
  • Time zone differences (Earlier a bug now a
    feature)
  • Degree of Need for Specialized Expertise
  • Trans-border Data Restrictions
  • Immigration and other Cross-border Restrictions
    (H1B, L1 visas security considerations)

7
  • Value Addition Models
  • By understanding the offshore teams role in
    value addition, firms can plan their models
    accordingly. Also, as costs get higher, offshore
    teams can also move up the learning curve to
    higher value jobs.
  • Low-end
  • Mid-range
  • High-end
  • For the nation, the important issue is not where
    companies are based, but where value addition is
    based.

8
Delivery Models
  • Captive center
  • Joint venture
  • Third party
  • Many interrelated issues make different models
    right for different firms. For example,
    third-party ventures may allow firms to avoid PR
    issues of using child labor, or local corruption
    practices

9
Key Motivators
  • Cost
  • Skill Levels
  • Time to Enter Market
  • Economies of Scale
  • Local Market Needs
  • Opportunity to Concentrate on Bigger Issues

10
Key Hurdles
  • Lack of Management Support
  • Resistance from Employees
  • Difficulty in Negotiating Contracts
  • Difficulty in Finding Reliable Partners
  • Potential Risk to Intellectual Property
  • Political or Governmental Interference

11
Partnership Models
  • Resource Based
  • Offshore/Nearshore Development Center
  • Build, Operate, and Transfer
  • Joint Ventures
  • ..

12
Decision-making dependencies for individual work
3 scenarios
(a) Autonomous
(b) Semi-Autonomous
(c) Heavily-interdependent
- Three scenarios for decision making - This
really is a continuous scale, based on how
interdependent the tasks are Examples -
Autonomous call center - Semi-autonomous
hierarchy of experts (tv repair, etc) -
Heavily-interdependent software development -
Important thing is to assess the knowledge
interdependencies first, for two reasons 1) know
how to setup outsourcing structure for existing
operations 2) determine if new knowledge
dependencies can be made, leading to new
organizations
13
Organizational models for heavily-interdependent
teams
(a) Flat Organization
(b) Geography-specific
(c) Task-specific
Organizational models for heavily-interdependent
decision making teams. By addressing the
heavily-interdependent scenario, one can deal
with the complexities of relatively simpler
scenarios. Another axis to consider while
considering appropriate decision support systems
is the nature of the organization. In a flat
organization, all decision-makers, regardless of
task or geography, can be deemed to belong to a
single organization. In other cases, additional
layers of hierarchy exist within the overall
organization. Based on the degree of importance
played by the geography or the task, one can
visualize the three cases depicted in figure 3,
to filter decision making input and output
through either the geography or task group.
14
  • Strategic Issues
  • Roles of Government Agencies when to
    encourage/discourage?
  • Evolution of Enclaves infrastructure,
    training, security
  • Growing Digital Divide political risk of
    have-nots in unstable countries


15
  • Technical Issues
  • 24-Hour Knowledge Factory
  • Automated Translations on a real-time basis to
    open outsourcing to non-English markets
  • Surmounting Differences in Accents and Tones of
    Voice
  • Transformations and Mediations meaning of
    rear-ended
  • Wireless Grids (Wirelessgrids.net) - open rural
    areas to outsourcing


16
24-Hour Global Knowledge Factory
17
Knowledge Acquisition
  • Involves acquiring information from human beings,
    paper based documents, sensors, and other
    traditional media
  • May need to be done on a one time basis, periodic
    basis, or continuous basis
  • Driven by society, organization, or application

18
Two concurrent approaches to knowledge-based
design
  • MATE
  • Fully integrate all stakeholders into design
    process in an efficient and user-friendly manner
  • Collect and process expense and utility data
    using virtual methods
  • SSPARCy
  • Examine relation between changing expense and
    utility functions and design parameters
  • Provide designers with more concrete method of
    expressing design rationale
  • Result
  • Efficient communication across multiple
    locations
  • Innovative ways of collecting,
    processing,presenting and interpreting design
    information

19
Dynamic Web-based Interface for Knowledge
Acquisition
20
Decision Rationale Module
Decision Archival Module
Decision Rationale
Attribute Definition
Decision Parameters
Utility Interview
Utility Function
Utility Measures
Attribute Values
Architecture Diagram for KNOWFACT
21
Trusted Agents
  • Can access all the information from multiple
    databases held by participating organizations.
  • Will provide only subsets of information to other
    organizations on a need-to-know basis.
  • Can be used to access data that one finds hard to
    reach, such as the Medicorp data that the
    research group utilized.
  • Will play increasingly valuable role in
  • interorganizational data flows.

22
Knowledge Management
Bottleneck
Sources
Receivers
S1
R1
Pesetas
French francs
S2
R2
US
Sm
Rn
23
Knowledge Discovery
  • Human beings are good at visualizing in 2 or 3
    dimensions
  • Neural networks can perform good visualization in
    more dimensions
  • Peaks and valleys predicted with good learning
    ability, when signal to noise ratio is above a
    particular threshold

24
Neural Network Based Approaches
  • Neural Networks mimic the broad parallelism that
    characterizes the human brain
  • Ideal for detecting trends that even human
    experts may find very difficult to identify
  • In the case of Medicorp data, neural network
    data mining techniques could reduce inventory
    levels from 1 billion dollars to 500 million
    dollars.
  • Neural Network based data mining techniques
    appear
  • ideally suited for large data-analysis oriented
    applications
  • 50 reduction in carrying costs while leaving
  • operational readiness level unchanged!!!

25
Wireless Grids Virtual Organizations
  • Three aspects to consider when defining possible
    virtual organizations
  • Grid Computing Services versus Wireless Grid
    Services
  • Wireless phones versus Wireless Grids
  • What isnt being done right now.

Grid Computing Technology
Wireless Technology
Wireless Grid Services
26
Grids for Virtual Organizations
27
Virtual Enterprises?
  • The Virtual Enterprise is a network of several
    companies, which contribute their core
    competences and share resources such as
    information, knowledge, and even market access in
    order to exploit fast-changing market
    opportunities. The relationship can be long or
    short term.
  • Virtual Enterprise Computing Grid Computing

28
Design Challenges for Virtual Enterprises
  • Decentralized Control
  • Accounting
  • Preference Specification (Service Discrimination)
  • Ease of Use
  • Security
  • Heterogeneity
  • Cost vs. Performance
  • Low Overhead
  • Complementary Resource
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