Title: Information Systems Project Management
1(No Transcript)
2Information Systems Project Management
- Globalization and Outsourcing
3Globalization Class Agenda
- My Background
- Some Background on Globalization
- Why are Global Lessons Important?
- Whats Good About Offshore?
- Where Does It Stop?
- What is Different about Working Offshore?
- What Lessons Can We Draw?
4My Background
- About 30 Years in the Information Technology
profession, starting as a programmer in COBOL in
1976 - Worked primarily for Telecom Telecom Services
companies CP Telephone Company, ATT and CBIS
/ Convergys - From 1998-2005, final assignment with Convergys
was program and project director of the Sprint
Account - Directed matrixed project team of over 500
developing 600K Annual Hours of software - In that assignment, was involved in setting up
offshore center that now employs several hundred
developers testers
5My Background (cont)
- In 1998, earned Project Management Professional
designation (current thru 2010) - In 2003, entered UCF EMBA Program
- In 2005, exited program the day after I resigned
from Convergys - Was headed for career in teaching at college /
university level, when I got the call to apply
for another job - In March of 2006, accepted position as CIO of
Seminole County Public Schools - Still teaching in adjunct capacity off and on at
UCF, Rollins and SCC
6For Today
- Youre welcome to ask me about anything
- But the topic Dr. Jiang asked me to speak about
is actually Globalization - A topic that will consume six-eight hours in a
class Im teaching at Rollins in the Spring, and
hope to bring to UCF some day - A topic I lived for my last 4 years at Convergys,
personally running the numbers as program
director, doing the headcount allocations as
project director, and doing ten layoffs in one
morning as a member of a depleted management team
7The Real World
- This is real life as real as it gets in todays
world - And theres no stopping it, so the answer is
learning to adjust - As my ex-boss said, its not about those who have
to leave, its about making the best of what
remains - A year later, he was himself downsized, and is
now quite happy running his own business - But he was and is -- right
- Lifelong learning has never been so important,
and its importance will increase
8Some Background on Outsourcing and Globalization
- How it happened at one company The Convergys
Story - Convergys contract with Sprint is about to
expire - Sprint comes to Convergys looking for more
aggressive pricing, to match largest competitor
who has offered cut-rate deal - Competitor is based in Israel, offshores work to
India - Decision for Convergys Come in with similar
price, or exit business - Even if similar pricing means moving jobs offshore
9Background Its a Small, Small World
- And its getting smaller
- There are many countries who have caught the
capitalistic fever in some form, and they all
want our jobs - Starting with the lower economic rungs and
working their way up into the domain of middle
class, white collar jobs
10Background Data
- Indias middle class is as large today as the
entire population of the United States - Per Goldman Sachs, in the next decade more than
800 million people in China, India, Russia and
Brazil will be classified as middle class
(defined as 3,000 per year or more) - Thats more than the combined population of the
US, Western Europe and Japan - A Middle Class needs jobs, and they need goods
and services
11Background The Effect of the Internet
- The Internet and advancing communications have
fueled this phenomenon, and will continue to do
so - Anywhere, anytime Internet Access enables
movement of information-based jobs to any point
on the planet and 75 of todays US economy is
information-based - Developing countries with limited infrastructure
have already leapfrogged the United States,
Western Europe and Japan - The most connected country now is in Eastern
Europe
12Background Its Dynamic
- The new Phenomenon of Backsourcing
- Its not all black and white -- at some point
many industries will have to deal with its
implications - February 2006 Billing World Article, Is the
Shine off Offshore Outsourcing? makes point that
especially with high-touch, customer-sensitive
work US-based companies are reaching the
practical talent pool limits for offshoring in
some countries like India (question not whether
to offshore, but in which cases to do it) - March, 2006 Business 2.0 article suggests
outsourcing cost objectives not met 80 of the
time - Contractors pay/train less, with predictable
results - Less CSR Customer Identity
- Better for commodity puts customer relationship
at risk
13 And the Winners Are Not All Cheering, either
- February, 2006 HindustanTimes.Com article
Liberalisation vs. Globalisation documents the
India viewpoint - Impacts on farmers, factory workers, small
businesses as global brands predominate - India more culturally-ready for globalization,
even while feeling the backlash - Call center racist abuse
- And the West definition of the term, which is
often intended to be a one-way street - Notes Japan China have successfully resisted
liberalisation, and forecasts less
Westernization ahead
14Why Are Global Lessons Important?
- Per Gartner in 2003, by January 2005, 1 in 10
U.S. IT jobs and 1 in 20 non-IT jobs were
supposed to have moved offshore - The Internet is opening new, less expensive labor
markets, as well as new forms of business models
and new applications of technology - improved
knowledge access is the great international
equalizer
15Why Are Global Lessons Important? (cont)
- Technology professionals will likely experience
the same sort of wage drop as seen in
manufacturing, and the work is moving offshore
more rapidly - This is because its easier to move work across
computer networks than ship raw materials across
borders and have to deal with tariffs,
infrastructure issues, etc - And its already happening
16Why Are Global Lessons Important? (cont)
- In the IT Industry, offshore spending was
expected to have tripled in the period from 2000
to 2005 - Many engineering jobs are already in Russia, U.S.
tax returns are being prepared in India, software
is being written and tested in India and
Singapore China graduates 100,000 engineers and
scientists annually in one province alone - In fact, over 50 of 2006 federal tax returns
were prepared in India - And over 80 of US MRIs were read there
17Why Are Global Lessons Important? (cont)
- Even local governments are moving work offshore
- Convergys was in the hot seat for a while for its
part in winning call center work on a State of
Florida contract and outsourcing some of the jobs
to India centers it took a lot of reallocation
of resources to make sure the company could pass
the red-face test while saying those jobs were
all in the U.S.
18Why Are Global Lessons Important? (cont)
- This is still a small piece of the whole pie
- According to one recent Forrester research
article, its only less than two percent of the
jobs in the IT services category - According to one federal reserve regional bank
president, its only one-tenth of 1 of 2002 US
GDP - But it will continue to accelerate this is a
structural, not a temporary change, stories on
Backsourcing notwithstanding
19Why Are Global Lessons Important? (cont)
- It is becoming more the norm for work teams to be
both multi-cultural and multi-national - The India cost advantage is 13
- Russias cost advantage is 16, and their Math
training is better than in the U.S. - Competition drives cost reduction imperatives
that can only be satisfied with offshore mix
20A Somewhat Dated Slide that Makes the
PointAnnual US Dollar Cost for Programmer
- Singapore 19140 Brazil 5950
- Malaysia 8130 Russia 7940
- Vietnam 4110 Mexico 5150
- China 5850 India 6400
- Ireland 23500 Canada 28200
- Philippines 7250
- This number has probably doubled due to supply
demand conditions
21Why Are Global Lessons Important? (cont)
- Finding the best resource anywhere in the world
for a given piece of work will be the ultimate
driver of the final spread of jobs, but for now,
cost is the primary driver - But its not as evil and self-serving as it
sounds its basically market forces unchained
on a global scale, as the Convergys example shows
22Why Are Global Lessons Important? (cont)
- And as time goes on, our international
competitors will thirst for more in their quest
to fight their way up the economic food chain - India
- Lives under a democracy that is almost 60 years
old (worlds largest) - Has a totally free press, and worlds third
largest educated labor pool - Yet 70 of people still live in rural areas, and
- Literacy rates hover around 50, but
- Aggressively pursuing excellence in project
management - Now outsources some work to China
- Deere turbines now manufactured in India
- Also entering semiconductor manufacturing, per
March 2006 Business 2.0 news item - Russia Eastern Europe are beginning to look
more enticing - China is busily setting up knowledge center
business as well as manufacturing hubs
23So How About China?
- CIO Magazine article, Its Cheaper in China,
September, 2005 - More emphasis needed on precise process
definition communication barriers than in India - But Chinese government investing 5 billion in
English language education at universities - IT leaders planning to outsource to China within
next 3-5 years up to 40 from 8 - Labor costs 20 of U.S. lowest real estate/power
costs PwC estimates 37 savings over India - Hiring off-shift relationship manager good idea
24More on China
- CIO Magazine article, Making it in China,
October, 2005 - Logistics costs high in China
- Should use importers/exporters and logistics
providers - If labor LT 25 of TC, may want to mfg in West
- Factories not as flexible to design changes
- Supply chain precarious (and manual, with longer
lead times and higher inventories) - Govt involved in everything
- Contracts not followed to the letter
- Cash- and relationship-based economic system
25More on China
- Orlando Sentinel Insight article, Should America
Worry About China, 9/25/2005 - China India now cooperating in recognizing
common goal of selling to West - Rejection of central planning playing big role
- Value of human capital in growing global economy
plays to their strengths - China GDP growth over twice that of U.S.
- Produces 4 times more engineers than U.S.
- Purchasing power double Japans
- U.S. must increase education commitment to thrive
in the impending global economic war for jobs
26Why Are Global Lessons Important? (cont)
- Slow but steady redistribution of worlds income
to be less U.S.-concentrated will continue - Some jobs will move offshore to service growing
middle classes there - Global work mobility will increase
- But Offshore firms will increasingly set up
operations in the U.S., as well
27Whats Good About Offshore?
- Wider, deeper labor resource pool
- Less expensive labor that drives costs of
products services down - Can better service global and offshore customers
with in-country or near-country presence - Can more easily staff and work multiple shift
operations
28Where Does It Stop?
- Nobody has that answer, but
- There is a ceiling on numbers and types of
companies and jobs that will participate - Outsourcing is difficult to manage, so its reach
is more difficult beyond Fortune 500 companies
unless entire projects are outsourced - Basic supply and demand should begin to equalize
the cost as offshore economies heat up and labor
pools constrict - Some customer-intensive roles, like business
analysts, will still attach to time zones - Niche specialties will move slowly, if at all
- Management resources will be hard to come by in
some countries until they can be grown India is
a prime example
29Where Does It Stop?
- With many foreign governments supporting economic
policies that make it easier for U.S.-based
companies to set up shop within their borders
and - With those same governments pushing both English
language and knowledge economy education and - With the WTO aggressively pushing an open borders
agenda - This could run a very long course
30Whats Different about Offshore?
- Recent Computerworld Top Five Barriers to
Offshoring - Language
- Security
- Lack of Control
- Time Zones
- Political Risk
- Pretty consistent with what weve been saying. In
India, language not large issue
31Whats Different about Offshore?
- Time
- Zones - e.g., India 9.5 hours different, England
5-6 hours - can make progress difficult - Punctuality - e.g., less strict in the Eastern
cultures, more strict in England - Management - more concern for deadlines in U.S.
than anywhere else - Vacation - dissolving into a figment of
imagination in U.S., untouchable elsewhere
32What is Different?
- Work-Life Balance
- Most cultures draw a harder line between work and
home than the U.S. -- dont get between the
office door and the pub at 430 in England! - Local Cultural Observances
- In India
- 17 annual national holidays
- Have to start work on auspicious day
- Buildings must be blessed
33What is Different?
- Role of the Family Culture
- In U.S., weve worked hard over the years to
separate family considerations from the office - In other cultures, family blessing is a
prerequisite to taking and staying at a job - Advancement important to family respect in India
- Convergys had to create multiple bands to allow
for frequent promotions
34What is Different?
- Relationship vs. Task Orientation
- In Latin and Eastern cultures, its about who you
know and how you treat them, versus the U.S.,
where its more about what you know - Management Orientation
- U.S. employees tend toward challenging
management most other cultures are more
respectful of hierarchies and positions - In India, they hate to bring you bad news
- Body Language
- In India, a head shake (side-to-side in a sort of
circular motion) signals understanding, not
disagreement - Decision Making
- U.S. notorious for making decisions quickly
- French will agonize over a decision
- Chinese Mexicans may not make a decision until
theyve looked into your soul
35What is Different?
- Hiring and Retention
- Hiring practices will be different in India
- Retention is generally a big issue, so attrition
will be higher - average tenure is 2-3 years in
an economy where moving frequently is customary - Retention of management is even worse - economy
has produced many skilled workers, but is still
struggling to produce enough managers and leaders - Infrastructure
- Cant count on what we have in U.S. for example,
in India - Road system is inadequate, not having caught up
with growth in employment centers - Most employees do not drive - Convergys runs
seven bus routes to get them from home to work
and back, every day (not that theyd want to
drive) - Not unusual for electrical outages to occur daily
36One Other Long-Term Issue
- The Onshore Talent Erosion is a concern
- Gartner 2004 report urged U.S. based companies to
consider risk of losing internal expertise while
considering the cost savings of outsourcing - Movement of too many lower-level jobs may be
tempting, but it erodes entry level job demand,
which in turn could mortgage the future of a
company that gets too aggressive - And the economic impact of that talent erosion is
real - Lower domestic jobs and wage growth
- Higher unemployment cost burden
- Reduced spending
37What Lessons Can We Draw?
- Cost and global service drivers make it unlikely
that the train will slow down - Doing this isnt as easy as developing the
spreadsheet models - operating in and blending
multiple cultures is hard work - There are limitations to how many US-Based jobs
will move, and most Fortune 500 companies will be
hitting those ceilings in this decade (Convergys
is close)
38What Lessons Can We Draw?
- Free economies aspire to have a strong middle
class those that are not free need them even
more governments that get this will push for
their piece of the pie - The worker of the future will increasingly be
working as part of multi-national team - Leadership will require more flexibility and
awareness to deal with cultures and US staff
backlash to off-shoring of work
39What Lessons Can We Draw?Points on Successful
Outsourcing
- From an October 2005 CIO magazine article
- Pay close attention to managing customer/vendor
relationships - Transaction relationship where outsourcing
targets a well-defined, repeatable process are
usually successful, but can be drag on innovation - Outsourcing risk increases as client/vendor lines
blur Co-sourcing and strategic partnership
relationships are generally less successful
40What It Means in General
- Emerging countries like India, China, Russia
Brazil will advance as consumers but at their
own price points - The US labor force will have to work even smarter
to maintain a price differential - Commodity labor will continue to move offshore
- Global businesses will produce to the new price
points, using labor across the globe - The U.S. technology workers future will include
- More frequent job changes accompanied in some
cases by lower wages - More frequent relocation, more frequently to
international locations - More constant learning and training, including
mastering foreign languages in order to maintain
employability
41What It Means To Us
- We do not compete for jobs in a domestic labor
pool its largely global now - Our educational systems will have to compete with
systems in other countries where students spend
up to twelve hours a day on their studies - This is the reason I took the schools CIO job,
and what keeps me awake at night - We must do what is needed to stay competitive in
this shrinking world
42What Do We Do About It?
- In Ron Michaels Marketing EMBA class, we talked
a lot about sustainable competitive advantage
the thing that sets you apart from others in your
market - Tariffs and economic barriers provide some
short-term emotional gratification, but are not
sustainable in the type of free economy that we
espouse - companies are too clever - Anti-outsourcing web sites wont help
- Neither will white collar unionization
- And tax incentivizing corporations to keep jobs
here treats the symptom vs. the cause
43What Do We Do About It?
- Some ways we can deal with outsourcing
- With a positive attitude that makes one a master
of fate versus a victim - Workers should consider international assignments
and different types of jobs/industries where they
can use their skills - Workers also need to determine how to
characterize their contribution to an employers
bottom line - Corporate clarity during outsourcing initiatives
- Skills retraining programs
- Increased pension/insurance portability
- Increased adaptability innovation
- Individual initiative continuous learning
44What Do We Do About It?
- The Current Job Outlook is Good in at least a
couple of areas - Per May 2006 Business 2.0 The Next Job Boom
article, nine of top ten hot jobs for the
foreseeable future are in Healthcare and maybe
surprisingly IT - The tenth is college instructor (Paul, there is
hope!) - But that same article suggests that productivity
gains are about exhausted - Meaning exhortations to Work Smarter to combat
the offshoring of jobs is fast becoming a stale
strategy, especially for lower level and
commodity service positions
45What Do We Do About It?
- So on a deeper thinking level
- If you define the market as the global labor
pool, Id suggest that the problem definition is
What does the United States consider the
sustainable competitive advantage of its
workforce? - Nobody has a complete answer, but I have an idea
for you to consider (developed since I began
working with technical staff in India)
46What Do We Do About It?
- One Indian entrepreneur I met recently has earned
a mini-fortune in amassing a string of 7-Elevens,
and now is hiring U.S. MBAs to expand
horizontally into other businesses and strengthen
his management team - Three of my Class of 2005 have been working with
him - Another who is an executive of several
businesses using a US-based sales force and
management team, and India back office staff
has told me that we need to stop worrying about
the lower food-chain jobs and concentrate on our
ingenuity - Still another an ex-Convergys colleague with a
Harvard MBA who bought and sold an India call
center, and is dabbling in new start-ups is
advising US clients to redirect from the cost
focus and sharpen the saw on the quality side to
hold their business
47What Do We Do About It?
- Three very different opinions, but with a common
theme - The US has lost its cost edge
- Productivity gains working harder or smarter at
task work will not regain that edge in
commoditized work when its 30 cents to the US
dollar (or less!) on the world stage - The remaining US edge is in creativity and in a
multi-disciplinary focus to opportunities - Creating the Googles
- Being the engineer who knows how to manage a
multi-cultural team - Being the Project Manager who knows how the
project fits the strategic business context - Being committed to continuous self-reinvention
48Enough of the Slides, Already
- So what are your questions?
- And what are your thoughts?
- I leave you with a short article, Flat New
World, that sums it all up for the field of
project management, and for todays global work
environment - Be the best at something, focus on a skill area
that requires face-to-face contact, and commit
yourselves to continuous learning