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Stop bullying your outsourcer, companies warned

Companies that use harsh service level agreements to bully their outsourcing supplier could be missing out on a "trust dividend" worth up to 40 percent of the total contract value.
Written by Steve Ranger, Global News Director

Companies that use harsh service level agreements to bully their outsourcing supplier could be missing out on a "trust dividend" worth up to 40 percent of the total contract value.

Outsourcing based on mutual trust can create a 20 percent to 40 percent difference on service, quality, cost and other performance indicators, according to research by LogicaCMG and Warwick Business School.

Companies should agree a relationship charter with their outsourcing partner to set a benchmark for behaviour, and make sure regular health checks, balanced scorecards and senior executive dashboards are used to monitor progress.

The report said this means that the days of traditional outsourcing contracts, in which companies rely on punitive service level agreements (SLAs) and penalties to their service provider, are numbered.

Report co-author, professor Leslie Willcocks from Warwick Business School, said in a statement: "We found that contracts with well-managed relationships based on trust--rather than stringent SLAs and penalties - are more likely to lead to a 'trust dividend' for both parties."

He added: "Our study found a number of outsourcing contracts where adversarial behaviour, inexperience or lack of confidence led to the demise of a relationship."

And he warned: "Ignoring the value of properly managed outsourcing relationships is tantamount to corporate negligence - simply because it has such a huge impact on return on investment and the potential value gained from outsourcing."

Andrew de Cleyn, senior vice president, global service delivery at LogicaCMG, said in a statement: "Power-based relationships are poor substitutes for trust-based partnerships given the high transaction costs of monitoring and imposing sanctions and the limited goals that can be pursued by both parties."

Steve Ranger from Silicon.com reported from London.

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