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    Get Off Your Butt and Out of the Rut
    It's amazing to see so many people who are prepared to sacrifice their lives for the sake of their careers.I'm sure you know of someone like that. They get up at the crack of dawn, drag their weary bodies out of the house and head off for another exciting day at work. Ten or twelve hours later they head home totally exhausted with all their energy sapped from their body.They might make the effort to find out how the rest of their family's day has been, even read their children a bed-time story. Finally after having something to eat, taking a hot shower or bath, they then veg out on the couch. They immerse themselves in the newspaper (again) or watch the news or some mindless television show (if they don't fall asleep beforehand).And this is a common scenario for many people who work for someone else! I can understand it if you own your own business where there's so much extra pressure riding on you, yet to sacrifice so much for someone else???The SolicitorI met Jerry at the gym. He was telling me that for the past two years he has been working at a legal firm in the city. An average day commenced at 8.00 a.m. and finished at 7.00 p.m. Working weekends was common. Lunch breaks and time off were unheard of. This was the culture instilled at his company! No wonder staff turnover was high!Here was a young man, only 25 years old, absolutely stressed to the max.He felt he was on a rollercoaster and couldn't get off.Clearing the ClutterJerry was so entrenched in his situation he couldn't clearly see what he could do. He felt powerless so did nothing.I suggested to Jerry he write a lis
    dvance, and can reverse uncertainty, ambivalence and even downright hostility.

    Situations occasionally occur when those new to outsourcing approach the outsourcer with assumptions that don't turn out to be well-grounded. This pattern was chronic during the dot.com era, where companies were built overnight and needed to tap a huge skill base at a moment's notice. In some cases, managers themselves were new to the outsourcing process. Demands for instant response were complicated by requirements that armies of internal IT staff also be involved in the process - hardly a recipe for mutual success.

    Education should begin during the sales cycle. Determine how educated the organization is on the outsourcing process and see if they've done it before. It always helps make our lives a bit easier in terms of fulfillment of the service later on. The more knowledgeable they are on how to manage this relationship the more successful it is going to be.

    Rule #4: Communicate -- To Avoid Asserting Control

    Companies win with complete communication. In outsourcing, communication's twin is control - and the perception of control. It is vital that the outsourcer never seizes control from the customer (or appear to do so) because that is when complications arise. Maintaining open lines of communication so that the customer feels he or she is still in control -- and having a portal-type product that provides a complete window into the operation -- is vital to securing a strong, stable relationship. At the end of the day, a client who feels in the dark may well assume the outsourcer isn't fully on the case.

    Rules #5: Clarify Roles, and Stick to Them

    In today's market, most organizations have tried various outsourcer

    Value Pak Coupons - More than Junk Mail
    We walk to the mailbox hoping to find maybe a personalized letter for us, an important business letter or even checks if we get paid through the mail from time to time. However it can be quite annoying to find junk mail every day. Well there is one piece of mail that we can actually benefit from and use. We are talking about the Value Pak and it's money saving coupons. How can this piece of mail that is regularly circulated to the masses benefit you?While it is true that Value Pak coupons are usually for services like pool cleaning, rug and carpet services and other services we really are not interested however we can usually find at least one or two coupon gems. How can you determine what to look for?Is there a particular product or even service that you regularly use? Let me give you one of my favorites - dinning out. I love to eat out. The Value Pak is a source for finding restaurants that are new and our favorites looking to attract new customers. They do this by giving meals away or with discounted prices. So whenever I open the Value Pak I'm on the lookout for meal deals. Another service I love are for massages. There is one massage parlor in my area that leaves coupons in the Value Pak. I grab those too.So for you the Value Pak is more than just some piece of junk mail that comes in the mail periodically. It can actually set you on an adventure to places you have never tried at discounted prices.The one drawback to the Value Pak is that it mainly caters to businesses that offer services. Rarely will you find products or tangible items that you can buy at a reduced rate.
    While virtually every business now relies on information technology (IT) to help provide services or deliver products to the marketplace, things have rarely been more precarious for in-house IT professionals. This is so, despite the conventional wisdom that IT is acknowledged to be more strategic than ever.

    Increased market competition, more demanding customers, tighter margins and shorter product life cycles have caused businesses to examine where they may be able to focus better on core competencies, reduce risk and costs, and become more agile and competitive. For many companies and small businesses across all industry segments, outsourcing IT is the only answer.

    Outsourcing lowers operating costs, eliminates backlogs, improving data input quality, production and document availability. And, in the end, outsourcing adds profits to the bottom-line.

    But outsourcing is far from a panacea. How an outsourcing relationship is managed - internally and externally - is as important to its ultimate success as the execution of the outsourced tasks themselves. Given that industry analyst Gartner recently reported that outsourcing can trigger an employee backlash, what do organizations need to know to make outsourcing a win-win for all concerned? How can a company best manage the firm that it has just retained? What project management issues does outsourcing solve and what challenges does it entail?

    Outsourcing on Paper: Cost-Effective, Valuable, Efficient

    Outsourcing IT isn't only (or even primarily) about costs. In terms of hard dollars, outsourcing isn't always a decisive win over the in-house approach, although it usually is. The real advantages can be seen in the "soft gains" that accrue -- the opportunity costs of not having to reinvent the wheel, and the efficiencies that arise when enlisting a company that specializes in doing the heavy lifting of IT.

    Quality is an issue as well. In the hosting market, for instance, a company could hire five system administrators to run their network in-house, and find the collective wisdom limited to the specific experiences of that small team. When a third party assumes control of servers and infrastructure, that firm brings real world experience, gleaned from facing an array of problems across a diverse customer base. Dynamic learning occurs more rapidly because the outsourcing firm is simply in a better position to benefit from -- and propagate -- "best of breed" practices.

    Managing and retaining IT staff is challenging enough in prosperous times; in a down economy, the challenges intensify - and the management responsibilities in outsourcing likewise increase. Keeping IT staff motivated, focused and incentivized is perhaps the most formidable challenge. If an organization's IT returns on investment is on the order of 20-30 percent, reinvention and retraining are apt to be continuous. Accordingly, whether the market is up or down, the case for outsourcing persists. By contrast, if the organization has kept IT entirely in-house, it becomes considerably harder to double, triple or even cut staff, should the need arise. An outsourcing relationship ensures a constant pool of talent.

    Outsourcers are occasionally brought in to "clean up" unfinished business left by in-house teams that, for whatever reason, didn't see a project through to completion. It is always difficult for organizations to have to cut staff or downsize IT operations, especially for professionals who are accustomed to bigger budgets year after year. And when the mandate comes down from the CEO or whomever that IT budgets aren't going up -- and the only way the company is going to make its numbers is to let go of some of its people -- doubt looms large. That is the environment in which the quality of the management of outsourced relationships makes all the difference.

    Outsourcing tends to occur in waves. Even during those periods when outsourcing is relatively less in vogue, many organizations still elect to outsource non-core functions. The hot topic right now is offshore vs. onshore outsourcing, but overall, the ebb and flow is modest. Outsourcing isn't trendy; indeed, when factoring in the earnings of public companies engaged in IT sourcing, outsourced IT, represents a highly stable segment of the economy. Against this backdrop - and with an eye toward making the relationship between the outsourcing firm and its client organization productive for all concerned - it's necessary to lay down a few rules.

    Rule #1: Get Internal Buy-In

    Let's face facts: effective IT outsourcing usually means layoffs -- and it can change the jobs of some of those who remain. If an outsourcing firm is brought in to displace existing IT staff, internal buy-in must occur well before the decision is made to bring in that third party. Management must know (and intelligently communicate) that headcount will be reduced by so many and that a plan of action exists to ensure that these cuts, however painful to those involved, ultimately boost the organization.

    The best route to obtaining internal buy-in is to move incrementally. Outsource those projects linked to marginal products, rather than to strategic ones. Create an environment where the third party complements existing staff rather than replacing them outright. Doing so, can help promote in a sense, over time that, internal staff can be deployed somewhere else -- or even let go. The more strategic the project is, of course, the greater the political heat; the less strategic, the easier it is to get that buy-in for outsourcing.

    Rule #2: Go Beyond Buy-in to General Consensus

    "Buy-in" suggests a passive kind of acceptance. Effective management of outsourced relationships strives to go a step or two beyond. When the outsourcer arrives on the scene, a residue of resentment or lack of understanding frequently follows. The key to defusing that resentment is transparency on the outsourcer's part, in terms of both its operations and the organization's goals. When all parties can view how the outsourcer works -- through a portal product or some other mechanism -- it immediately becomes less likely that signals will get crossed and consensus may be within reach.

    While it's helpful for the outsourcer to embrace a new assignment with enthusiasm, that energy isn't always enough to counter the feeling among some that this new third party poses a threat. If management is savvy enough to know that some resentment is inevitable, gentle prodding of recalcitrant IT staff members toward a positive outcome can be decisive.

    Rule #3: Counter Backlash with Education

    Employee backlash is often manifested in passive-aggressive ways -- not sharing immediate deadlines or the full scope of the assignment with the outsourcer, for example, thereby triggering talk that the outsourcer isn't delivering on the promise. Education is an effective antidote to situations where the ground hasn't been cleared as well as it should have been in advance, and can reverse uncertainty, ambivalence and even downright hostility.

    Situations occasionally occur when those new to outsourcing approach the outsourcer with assumptions that don't turn out to be well-grounded. This pattern was chronic during the dot.com era, where companies were built overnight and needed to tap a huge skill base at a moment's notice. In some cases, managers themselves were new to the outsourcing process. Demands for instant response were complicated by requirements that armies of internal IT staff also be involved in the process - hardly a recipe for mutual success.

    Education should begin during the sales cycle. Determine how educated the organization is on the outsourcing process and see if they've done it before. It always helps make our lives a bit easier in terms of fulfillment of the service later on. The more knowledgeable they are on how to manage this relationship the more successful it is going to be.

    Rule #4: Communicate -- To Avoid Asserting Control

    Companies win with complete communication. In outsourcing, communication's twin is control - and the perception of control. It is vital that the outsourcer never seizes control from the customer (or appear to do so) because that is when complications arise. Maintaining open lines of communication so that the customer feels he or she is still in control -- and having a portal-type product that provides a complete window into the operation -- is vital to securing a strong, stable relationship. At the end of the day, a client who feels in the dark may well assume the outsourcer isn't fully on the case.

    Rules #5: Clarify Roles, and Stick to Them

    In today's market, most organizations have tried various outsourcers

    Make Sure You Get The Customer Perspective
    Businesses that fail, often forget to seek out the customer perspective. I have talked to some folks at businesses that were less than succesful, and when asked if they actively seek out customer comments, the answer invariably is no. Why don't they do that? Why not get the customer perspective?Oftentimes, the company is overconfident, and thinks they know what customers want. This myth, because that's what it is, can be upheld as long as the customer is not involved. However, the customer has a strong vote in the buying process, and in the end it will become crystal clear how the customer feels! At that point, of course, it's too late to do anything about it.Another reason for not asking the customer is fear. From the customer perspective you might not be doing so well as you thought you were. For insecure persons that may come as a blow! In order to protect themselves, some folks just don't want to hear it and simply don't ask. On the other hand, they could be missing out on a whole lot of uplifting comments.Get real! Would you rather get the customer's votes in your wallet, or in your mailbox?The sooner you know how the customer feels about your business, the sooner you can start to correct any shortcomings that may emerge. But you have to act. There is no use in hiding the remarks you don't like. This doesn't change the reality. Put your customer in the centre of your business and let the rest follow in tune.This can only improve your bottom line.
    s of not having to reinvent the wheel, and the efficiencies that arise when enlisting a company that specializes in doing the heavy lifting of IT.

    Quality is an issue as well. In the hosting market, for instance, a company could hire five system administrators to run their network in-house, and find the collective wisdom limited to the specific experiences of that small team. When a third party assumes control of servers and infrastructure, that firm brings real world experience, gleaned from facing an array of problems across a diverse customer base. Dynamic learning occurs more rapidly because the outsourcing firm is simply in a better position to benefit from -- and propagate -- "best of breed" practices.

    Managing and retaining IT staff is challenging enough in prosperous times; in a down economy, the challenges intensify - and the management responsibilities in outsourcing likewise increase. Keeping IT staff motivated, focused and incentivized is perhaps the most formidable challenge. If an organization's IT returns on investment is on the order of 20-30 percent, reinvention and retraining are apt to be continuous. Accordingly, whether the market is up or down, the case for outsourcing persists. By contrast, if the organization has kept IT entirely in-house, it becomes considerably harder to double, triple or even cut staff, should the need arise. An outsourcing relationship ensures a constant pool of talent.

    Outsourcers are occasionally brought in to "clean up" unfinished business left by in-house teams that, for whatever reason, didn't see a project through to completion. It is always difficult for organizations to have to cut staff or downsize IT operations, especially for professionals who are accustomed to bigger budgets year after year. And when the mandate comes down from the CEO or whomever that IT budgets aren't going up -- and the only way the company is going to make its numbers is to let go of some of its people -- doubt looms large. That is the environment in which the quality of the management of outsourced relationships makes all the difference.

    Outsourcing tends to occur in waves. Even during those periods when outsourcing is relatively less in vogue, many organizations still elect to outsource non-core functions. The hot topic right now is offshore vs. onshore outsourcing, but overall, the ebb and flow is modest. Outsourcing isn't trendy; indeed, when factoring in the earnings of public companies engaged in IT sourcing, outsourced IT, represents a highly stable segment of the economy. Against this backdrop - and with an eye toward making the relationship between the outsourcing firm and its client organization productive for all concerned - it's necessary to lay down a few rules.

    Rule #1: Get Internal Buy-In

    Let's face facts: effective IT outsourcing usually means layoffs -- and it can change the jobs of some of those who remain. If an outsourcing firm is brought in to displace existing IT staff, internal buy-in must occur well before the decision is made to bring in that third party. Management must know (and intelligently communicate) that headcount will be reduced by so many and that a plan of action exists to ensure that these cuts, however painful to those involved, ultimately boost the organization.

    The best route to obtaining internal buy-in is to move incrementally. Outsource those projects linked to marginal products, rather than to strategic ones. Create an environment where the third party complements existing staff rather than replacing them outright. Doing so, can help promote in a sense, over time that, internal staff can be deployed somewhere else -- or even let go. The more strategic the project is, of course, the greater the political heat; the less strategic, the easier it is to get that buy-in for outsourcing.

    Rule #2: Go Beyond Buy-in to General Consensus

    "Buy-in" suggests a passive kind of acceptance. Effective management of outsourced relationships strives to go a step or two beyond. When the outsourcer arrives on the scene, a residue of resentment or lack of understanding frequently follows. The key to defusing that resentment is transparency on the outsourcer's part, in terms of both its operations and the organization's goals. When all parties can view how the outsourcer works -- through a portal product or some other mechanism -- it immediately becomes less likely that signals will get crossed and consensus may be within reach.

    While it's helpful for the outsourcer to embrace a new assignment with enthusiasm, that energy isn't always enough to counter the feeling among some that this new third party poses a threat. If management is savvy enough to know that some resentment is inevitable, gentle prodding of recalcitrant IT staff members toward a positive outcome can be decisive.

    Rule #3: Counter Backlash with Education

    Employee backlash is often manifested in passive-aggressive ways -- not sharing immediate deadlines or the full scope of the assignment with the outsourcer, for example, thereby triggering talk that the outsourcer isn't delivering on the promise. Education is an effective antidote to situations where the ground hasn't been cleared as well as it should have been in advance, and can reverse uncertainty, ambivalence and even downright hostility.

    Situations occasionally occur when those new to outsourcing approach the outsourcer with assumptions that don't turn out to be well-grounded. This pattern was chronic during the dot.com era, where companies were built overnight and needed to tap a huge skill base at a moment's notice. In some cases, managers themselves were new to the outsourcing process. Demands for instant response were complicated by requirements that armies of internal IT staff also be involved in the process - hardly a recipe for mutual success.

    Education should begin during the sales cycle. Determine how educated the organization is on the outsourcing process and see if they've done it before. It always helps make our lives a bit easier in terms of fulfillment of the service later on. The more knowledgeable they are on how to manage this relationship the more successful it is going to be.

    Rule #4: Communicate -- To Avoid Asserting Control

    Companies win with complete communication. In outsourcing, communication's twin is control - and the perception of control. It is vital that the outsourcer never seizes control from the customer (or appear to do so) because that is when complications arise. Maintaining open lines of communication so that the customer feels he or she is still in control -- and having a portal-type product that provides a complete window into the operation -- is vital to securing a strong, stable relationship. At the end of the day, a client who feels in the dark may well assume the outsourcer isn't fully on the case.

    Rules #5: Clarify Roles, and Stick to Them

    In today's market, most organizations have tried various outsourcer

    Small Business Marketing Secret #6: A Bucket of Hot Dogs and a Squirt of Word-of-Mouth Advertising
    What's your best form of advertising? If you're like the vast majority of the people we meet, it's word-of-mouth. Of course – it automatically offers a virtually infinite return on investment because it's free!Since you're like most people we meet in that regard, you're probably similar in another – you can't control word-of-mouth advertising.Don't feel like you're alone. The very trait that makes this form of advertising so desired (it's free) also makes it very elusive (you can't buy it).Imagine for a second a 50 gallon metal bucket loaded up with sand or dirt or hotdogs or something. Can you lift it? We just tested it, and we can't even lift it together.Now, picture that same large bucket, but this time put a wheel on one end and two handles on the other. Like a wheelbarrow. Can you lift it? You certainly have a better chance now. The weight hasn't changed and the material hasn't changed – but now you are putting physics to work in your favor. That wheel acts as a fulcrum and the handles give you leverage. Before you know it, you're wheeling that 400 pound bucket of hotdogs right down the sidewalk.The same analogy holds true in word-of-mouth advertising. When you look at the problem from the obvious perspective it seems about as hard to control as the bucket of wieners.But, if you apply nontraditional marketing "physics" to the problem, you can soon begin controlling the previously uncontrollable.Here are a few levers and fulcrums that you can try in your business:Viral Marketing: the perfect example can be found at http://www.subservientchicken.com. Create something that is very i
    gets year after year. And when the mandate comes down from the CEO or whomever that IT budgets aren't going up -- and the only way the company is going to make its numbers is to let go of some of its people -- doubt looms large. That is the environment in which the quality of the management of outsourced relationships makes all the difference.

    Outsourcing tends to occur in waves. Even during those periods when outsourcing is relatively less in vogue, many organizations still elect to outsource non-core functions. The hot topic right now is offshore vs. onshore outsourcing, but overall, the ebb and flow is modest. Outsourcing isn't trendy; indeed, when factoring in the earnings of public companies engaged in IT sourcing, outsourced IT, represents a highly stable segment of the economy. Against this backdrop - and with an eye toward making the relationship between the outsourcing firm and its client organization productive for all concerned - it's necessary to lay down a few rules.

    Rule #1: Get Internal Buy-In

    Let's face facts: effective IT outsourcing usually means layoffs -- and it can change the jobs of some of those who remain. If an outsourcing firm is brought in to displace existing IT staff, internal buy-in must occur well before the decision is made to bring in that third party. Management must know (and intelligently communicate) that headcount will be reduced by so many and that a plan of action exists to ensure that these cuts, however painful to those involved, ultimately boost the organization.

    The best route to obtaining internal buy-in is to move incrementally. Outsource those projects linked to marginal products, rather than to strategic ones. Create an environment where the third party complements existing staff rather than replacing them outright. Doing so, can help promote in a sense, over time that, internal staff can be deployed somewhere else -- or even let go. The more strategic the project is, of course, the greater the political heat; the less strategic, the easier it is to get that buy-in for outsourcing.

    Rule #2: Go Beyond Buy-in to General Consensus

    "Buy-in" suggests a passive kind of acceptance. Effective management of outsourced relationships strives to go a step or two beyond. When the outsourcer arrives on the scene, a residue of resentment or lack of understanding frequently follows. The key to defusing that resentment is transparency on the outsourcer's part, in terms of both its operations and the organization's goals. When all parties can view how the outsourcer works -- through a portal product or some other mechanism -- it immediately becomes less likely that signals will get crossed and consensus may be within reach.

    While it's helpful for the outsourcer to embrace a new assignment with enthusiasm, that energy isn't always enough to counter the feeling among some that this new third party poses a threat. If management is savvy enough to know that some resentment is inevitable, gentle prodding of recalcitrant IT staff members toward a positive outcome can be decisive.

    Rule #3: Counter Backlash with Education

    Employee backlash is often manifested in passive-aggressive ways -- not sharing immediate deadlines or the full scope of the assignment with the outsourcer, for example, thereby triggering talk that the outsourcer isn't delivering on the promise. Education is an effective antidote to situations where the ground hasn't been cleared as well as it should have been in advance, and can reverse uncertainty, ambivalence and even downright hostility.

    Situations occasionally occur when those new to outsourcing approach the outsourcer with assumptions that don't turn out to be well-grounded. This pattern was chronic during the dot.com era, where companies were built overnight and needed to tap a huge skill base at a moment's notice. In some cases, managers themselves were new to the outsourcing process. Demands for instant response were complicated by requirements that armies of internal IT staff also be involved in the process - hardly a recipe for mutual success.

    Education should begin during the sales cycle. Determine how educated the organization is on the outsourcing process and see if they've done it before. It always helps make our lives a bit easier in terms of fulfillment of the service later on. The more knowledgeable they are on how to manage this relationship the more successful it is going to be.

    Rule #4: Communicate -- To Avoid Asserting Control

    Companies win with complete communication. In outsourcing, communication's twin is control - and the perception of control. It is vital that the outsourcer never seizes control from the customer (or appear to do so) because that is when complications arise. Maintaining open lines of communication so that the customer feels he or she is still in control -- and having a portal-type product that provides a complete window into the operation -- is vital to securing a strong, stable relationship. At the end of the day, a client who feels in the dark may well assume the outsourcer isn't fully on the case.

    Rules #5: Clarify Roles, and Stick to Them

    In today's market, most organizations have tried various outsourcer

    4 Tips on How to Avoid Communication Lines Breakdown
    For example, in a small, two-person company, there is often the greatest opportunity for direct conversation and discussion throughout the day. There are only two possibilities for verbal communication and it’s usually quick, easy and descriptive.If, however, a third member is added to the team, then six possible lines of communication are created - an increase of 300%. Direct communication becomes more difficult and often messages are interpreted (or misinterpreted) in a variety of different ways.Now, add a fourth team member and your communication possibilities increase to 12. A fifth person increases the possibilities to 20. That’s 20 different ways a message can be sent and interpreted.At this point a “communication failure” can occur. At a time when the company should be focusing on growth and expansion, it is instead faced with confusion, misunderstanding and wasted time.Here are a few tips for avoiding the breakdowns that may occur when the lines of communication become overwhelming:* Periodically pull together all members of the team. Choose one time to convey your message, new policies etc…. If possible, find a time when there are few distractions, such as when machines are shut down or when the phones aren’t ringing. There is often a strong case to meet away from the usual place of work.* If the message you plan to convey is long or complex, present it verbally, then distribute written copies of the same statement. This technique increases retention and understanding substantially.* When there are at least five team members, the company’s communications system becomes more fo
    s existing staff rather than replacing them outright. Doing so, can help promote in a sense, over time that, internal staff can be deployed somewhere else -- or even let go. The more strategic the project is, of course, the greater the political heat; the less strategic, the easier it is to get that buy-in for outsourcing.

    Rule #2: Go Beyond Buy-in to General Consensus

    "Buy-in" suggests a passive kind of acceptance. Effective management of outsourced relationships strives to go a step or two beyond. When the outsourcer arrives on the scene, a residue of resentment or lack of understanding frequently follows. The key to defusing that resentment is transparency on the outsourcer's part, in terms of both its operations and the organization's goals. When all parties can view how the outsourcer works -- through a portal product or some other mechanism -- it immediately becomes less likely that signals will get crossed and consensus may be within reach.

    While it's helpful for the outsourcer to embrace a new assignment with enthusiasm, that energy isn't always enough to counter the feeling among some that this new third party poses a threat. If management is savvy enough to know that some resentment is inevitable, gentle prodding of recalcitrant IT staff members toward a positive outcome can be decisive.

    Rule #3: Counter Backlash with Education

    Employee backlash is often manifested in passive-aggressive ways -- not sharing immediate deadlines or the full scope of the assignment with the outsourcer, for example, thereby triggering talk that the outsourcer isn't delivering on the promise. Education is an effective antidote to situations where the ground hasn't been cleared as well as it should have been in advance, and can reverse uncertainty, ambivalence and even downright hostility.

    Situations occasionally occur when those new to outsourcing approach the outsourcer with assumptions that don't turn out to be well-grounded. This pattern was chronic during the dot.com era, where companies were built overnight and needed to tap a huge skill base at a moment's notice. In some cases, managers themselves were new to the outsourcing process. Demands for instant response were complicated by requirements that armies of internal IT staff also be involved in the process - hardly a recipe for mutual success.

    Education should begin during the sales cycle. Determine how educated the organization is on the outsourcing process and see if they've done it before. It always helps make our lives a bit easier in terms of fulfillment of the service later on. The more knowledgeable they are on how to manage this relationship the more successful it is going to be.

    Rule #4: Communicate -- To Avoid Asserting Control

    Companies win with complete communication. In outsourcing, communication's twin is control - and the perception of control. It is vital that the outsourcer never seizes control from the customer (or appear to do so) because that is when complications arise. Maintaining open lines of communication so that the customer feels he or she is still in control -- and having a portal-type product that provides a complete window into the operation -- is vital to securing a strong, stable relationship. At the end of the day, a client who feels in the dark may well assume the outsourcer isn't fully on the case.

    Rules #5: Clarify Roles, and Stick to Them

    In today's market, most organizations have tried various outsourcer

    Globalization & Management
    Everyone is today concerned about globalization. Love it or hate it, globalization is here to stay! Even political parties that are left behind are willy, nilly forced to admit that it is a phenomenon that is well and truly out of the bottle ! Technology has done what idealogy could not : unite us all into a fraternity of interconnected and interdependent communities.How do traditionalists deal with such a new world order ? The short answer is that they cannot because their analytical frameworks are incompatible with current realities. Moore’s law for example, has ensured that the frontiers of knowledge are constantly expanding. The law postulates that the density of information that can be packed into a computer chip doubles every 18 months or so. This means that computing power is doubling every 18 months thereby enabling undreamed of advances in science, technology and knowledge in general. Who would have thought that it was possible to unravel the mystery of life by cracking the hitherto undecipherable genetic code ? Perhaps the best is yet to come because the pundits expect Moore’s law to be valid till the year 2017 when the limits of computing as we know it would be reached. That’s when sub-atomic computing is expected to take over and keep computational power growing.All this inevitably means that human beings are getting even more connected every day. Some observers are convinced that the greatest technological marvel of the last century was not the computer chip but the Internet. This is in turn means a networked and therefore globalized world. So, to us in India what are the implications of globalization ?Change is
    dvance, and can reverse uncertainty, ambivalence and even downright hostility.

    Situations occasionally occur when those new to outsourcing approach the outsourcer with assumptions that don't turn out to be well-grounded. This pattern was chronic during the dot.com era, where companies were built overnight and needed to tap a huge skill base at a moment's notice. In some cases, managers themselves were new to the outsourcing process. Demands for instant response were complicated by requirements that armies of internal IT staff also be involved in the process - hardly a recipe for mutual success.

    Education should begin during the sales cycle. Determine how educated the organization is on the outsourcing process and see if they've done it before. It always helps make our lives a bit easier in terms of fulfillment of the service later on. The more knowledgeable they are on how to manage this relationship the more successful it is going to be.

    Rule #4: Communicate -- To Avoid Asserting Control

    Companies win with complete communication. In outsourcing, communication's twin is control - and the perception of control. It is vital that the outsourcer never seizes control from the customer (or appear to do so) because that is when complications arise. Maintaining open lines of communication so that the customer feels he or she is still in control -- and having a portal-type product that provides a complete window into the operation -- is vital to securing a strong, stable relationship. At the end of the day, a client who feels in the dark may well assume the outsourcer isn't fully on the case.

    Rules #5: Clarify Roles, and Stick to Them

    In today's market, most organizations have tried various outsourcers, with varying degrees of success. Because not every encounter is a positive one, companies often have their defenses up, and it's not unusual for hurdles to exist at the outset -- even in a fresh relationship that isn't immediately leading to job loss. In that environment, the very best way to overcome these hurdles is to emphasize the (non-threatening) partner role: that the outsourcer is more of an offshoot of the IT department than an adversary or replacement. The consistent goal is to make it easier for IT managers and IT staff to do what they must do to meet the business's needs. The outsourcer's key function is not just to affect head count; it's to help the organization improve upon the services it could obtain internally at a given budget level.

    Rule #6: Learn and Apply Patience

    It takes typically about three months before both sides in a relationship are fully comfortable with one another and truly understand mutual expectations. Even for outsourcers with well-defined processes, writing that custom playbook takes a bit of time. Patience invariably fosters teamwork, and avoids common laments (e.g., "I'm opening a trouble ticket with so and so, and who knows when they're going get to it?") that can afflict outsourcing relationships. Once the mutual discovery phase is over, it's time to for everyone to get comfortable with how things are going. At that point, however, if the comfort level isn't there, for any reason, it's an optimum time for management on both sides to examine why.

    Rule #7: Impose and Enforce Structure

    In order to have a successful outsourcing engagement, companies need, clear, concrete goals. A goal shouldn't be something vague (like, "we want to get our IT outsourced"), it should be as concrete as, "we offered our exchange server hosting to this company and we will make sure that service availability is 99.9 percent or greater." To hit that goal, organize formal, frequent meetings (even twice a week) until everyone knows what the milestones and the deadlines are. After the first few months, once a decent product or service is up and running, it's less important to adhere to a rigid structure around deliverables. Weekly meetings, with an overview of outstanding items, new items, upcoming items, etc., should suffice.

    Management has a major role to play here. Prior to bringing in an outsourcer, some organizations find that IT staff has been sitting around doing very little, if anything. That isn't because there is nothing to do -- it's because management hasn't said, "Here's the IT project, here are the goals we have, here's what we have to do, here's what will help us strategically." Because these edicts are not handed down, no one has been clear on the mandate. In an outsourcing relationship, by contrast, there tends to be a great deal more specificity because hard dollars are leaving the company. The best discovery meetings address budget issues head on; the charge then becomes to determine exactly what the organization wants from its investment. What is the goal? What is the value to the organization? What's to come out of this? These are the kinds of questions that make for smoother relationships.

    Rule#8: Keep the Humanity in the Equation (then, re-read Rules #1-#7)

    In the end, outsourcing is a human-centered business. Emotions do come into play, since jobs are ultimately at stake. Keeping that big picture in mind, have a clear-cut goal for what the relationship is going to be. Identify and maintain a single, designated point of contact as to who is tasked with managing the outsourcer; don't have six contact people, and don't let management responsibilities stray from the IT realm to other departments. Have weekly review meetings with the outsourcer to make sure that goals are being hit; don't assume that the outsourcer is doing its job.

    Ask for feedback from the outsourcer; use this seasoned third party as a live, informal auditing arm. Ask for ideas about recommended internal improvements. (Side benefit: if the outsourcer doesn't offer input, that in itself may be a red flag.) Good outsourcers will always find issues, because the nature of the business is to gain an intricate look into internal operations. If the outsourcing relationship is on a solid footing and the outsourcer is on its game, the firm's best practices will come into play. That, in turn, should provide ample comfort to everyone involved -- and retire the backlash in the process.

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