Title: Information Technology Outsourcing: A Strategic Management Framework
1Information Technology Outsourcing A Strategic
Management Framework
State of the Art Literature Review October
2005 Jo Ann Saitta, Ph.D. candidate Department
of Information Systems New Jersey Institute of
Technology Advisor Jerry Fjermestad,
Ph.D. School of Management New Jersey Institute
of Technology
2Agenda
- Introduction
- Current research
- Motivation
- History Definitions
- Theoretical Foundations
- Current Outsourcing and Industry Models
- ITO Framework
- Value
- Components
- New Themes
- Conclusion
- Future Research
3Information Technology Outsourcing Research
- 24 months to date
- Academic and professional review of literature
and empirical studies - No one source of ITO success factors
- ITO strategic management framework integrates the
success factors and synergies from IT outsourcing
and strategic management literature
4Motivation
- To determine which factors are the most important
for IT outsourcing - To determine if these factors are segmented by
on-shore vs. off-shore - To determine if these factors are segmented by
industry - To integrate the existing models and frameworks
5Benefits
- Guide to successfully manage IT outsourcing
- Provides understanding of key IS management/staff
skills - Provides an academic basis for learning and
future empirical studies.
6IT Outsourcing Definitions
7SOTA IT Outsourcing Definition
- For the purposes of the SOTA, I define
Information Technology Outsourcing (ITO) as the
decision by an organization to contract an
external provider in the delivery and/or support
of IT and/or IS services and functions. -
- An assumption is that services are contracted for
agreed upon pricing and specified period of time.
- The definition applies to some or all IT/IS
services and functions. - The definition purposefully does not
differentiate between type of services (e.g.
application development versus infrastructure
hosting), nor does it distinguish between
offshore and on shore outsourcing. - The rationale being that the success factors
outlined in the basic model are not limited based
upon IT/IS function or location of the
outsourcing vendor.
8History
- In 1989, Eastman Kodak signed landmark
mega-outsourcing deal for 250 million over 10
years with IBM Corporation, Digital Equipment
Corporation, and Businessland Inc. (Field, 1999).
The beginning of a new era in large scale IT
outsourcing. - A year after Kodak signed the outsourcing deals,
CIO reported IT capital costs dropped 95, PC
costs lowered between 5-10, and mainframe
processing costs were reduced by 10-15 (Field,
1999). - Traditional motivations were to reduce cost.
Specifically with offshore outsourcing for
significantly lower wages. - Current research (Kern and Willcocks 2000, Ross
and Westerman 2004, Kishore 2003, Kaiser 2004,
Lander 2004, IBM 2004, Smith and McKeen 2004),
suggests motivation is more strategic in nature
with the goal of improving the business
competitive advantage.
Kodak, A New Era
Cost Savings
Lower Wages
Strategic Motives
9The last decade
- Organizations placed more focus on their core
competency business (Field, 1999). - IT was now measured by metrics and service level
agreements, and not just budgets or capital spend
(Field, 1999). - The changing role of the CIO from operational
figure to strategic planner (Field, 1999). - IT outsourcing not only for cost savings but as a
tool for utilizing state of the art service
providers (Field, 1999). - A large growth in business process outsourcing
with the success of ITO (Field, 1999) -
- Global Insourcing Bank of America (Hopkins,
2005), Avon Products (King, 2003), Global
Exchange Services Inc. (King, 2003) and Allstate
Insurance (King, 2003).
Core Competency
Service Level Metrics
CIO, strategic planner
Service Providers
BPO
Global Insourcing
10The Future
- Gartner reports that the worldwide outsourcing
market is expected to grow from 293.4 billion in
2003 to 429.2 billion in 2008 (De Souza, 2004). -
- The Indian IT services market is predicted to run
a compound annual growth rate of 17.4 percent
through 2008, reaching 3.7 billion (Datar,
2004).
11The Need for a Framework
12Strategic Frameworks
- In the past, organizations have used frameworks
and models as guidelines for assessing their
current state and determining future actions
(Gorry and Scott-Morton 1971, Nolan 1973, Luftman
1999, Venkatraman and Henderson 1993). - The proposed ITO framework can be used by
organizations to benchmark their current maturity
with ITO management and determine improvements
they wish to make to achieve success. - The ITO strategic management framework is based
on prior existing theoretical frameworks and
models
13Previous Theoretical Models
IMM 2004
Infrastructure Maturity Model
Smith McKeen 2004
Sourincg Strategy Model
Kishore et.al. 2003
Offshore Relationship Model
Khan, Currie Guah 2003
Offshore Outsourcing Model
Carmel Agarwal 2002
Offshore Outsourcing Maturity
Luftman 1999, 2000
Business/IT Alignment
CMM 1997
Software Development Maturity
Venkatraman Henderson 1993
Strategic Alignment
Nolan 1973
Computer spend
14Previous Theoretical Models
- Nolans Stage Model (1973) maturity based on
computer investments - Strategic Alignment Venkatraman and Henderson
(1993) - IT Business Alignment Luftman (1999, 2000)
- The Offshore Outsourcing framework of Khan,
Currie, and Guah (2003) - The Offshore Outsourcing Maturity Model of
Carmel and Agarwal (2002) - Offshore Sourcing Strategy, Smith and McKeen
(2004) - Outsourcing Relationships (FORT), Kishore et. al.
(2003) - The Capability Maturity Model from the Carnegie
Melon Software Institute, (Herbsleb, Zubrow ,
Goldenson, Hayes, and Paulk, 1997), - The Infrastructure Maturity Model, Bitman (2004)
15The building blocks of the ITO
16A Strategic Framework for IT Outsourcing
17Methodology for creation the ITO framework
- The methodology used to create the integrated
framework consisted of a literature evaluation of
IT outsourcing and strategic management articles
in an effort to identify synergies and success
factors. -
- The articles surveyed were from both academic and
industry publications. - The collection of success factors were developed
into an integrated strategic framework that is
useful to IT managers in decision making and
ongoing strategic planning for IT outsourcing.
Managers can utilize this practical checklist
based upon current literature.
18Integrated IT Outsourcing Management Framework
Cost Quality
19Alignment to business strategy
- The mapping of outsourcing decisions to business
strategy. Ensuring that IT aligns with
strategies.
- Medjahed, et al., 2003
- El Sawy, et al., 1999
- Henderson Venkatraman (1993)
- Ba, et al., 2001
- Zwass 2003
- Beck, 2002
- Carmel, 2002
- Lee, 2001
- Ross and Westerman, 2004
- Boden, 2004
- Huang, Ceroni and Nof, 2000
- Sheridan, 1996
- Luftman (1999, 2000)
- Kohli and Devaraj 2004
- Hefner 2003
- Luftman and McLean 2004
20Contracts
- A formal document of the goals, requirements and
commitments for the relationship. - Measurements and standards
- Understanding core competencies, goals, for all
partners and shared risk/benefit.
- Beck, 2002
- Kahn, et al. 2003
- Delmonte and McCarthy, 2003
- Lee, 2003
- Benoit, Houde, Patry, and Rivard, 2003
- Byson and Sullivan 2003
- Beulen and Ribbers 2003
21Infrastructure
- The technical environment which includes network,
hardware and software - Interoperability and integration of multiple
components - Technology standards and scalability are key
elements to an effective infrastructure
- Zwass, 2003
- Kahn et al., 2003
- Sakaguchi 2003
- Medjahed et. al., 2003
- Weill and Vitale, 2002
22Culture
- Cultural readiness by both the organization and
proposed vendors - Issues of trade policies, tax, licenses, etc.
- Proper communication among the partners
- Evaluate political climates
- Zwass 2003
- Carmel 2002
- Kahn 2003
- Delmonte 2003
- Sakaguchi 2003
- El Sawy 1999
- Davison 2004
23Strategic Partnership
- Form and maintain partnerships internal/ external
to the organization - Customer Relationship Management and Vendor
Management - Formation of collaborative teams. Fosters
flexibility, communications, timeliness, and
mutually beneficial relationships.
- Lee 2001
- Zwass 2003
- Lee 2003
- Rogers 2001
- Phan, 2002
- Shaw, 2000
- Kern and Willcocks, 2000
- Sharma, et. al 2002
- Kavan, et. al 2002
- Ross and Westerman, 2004
- Kaiser and Hawk 2004
- Lee and Kim 2003
24Management Support
- Management support of decisions on outsourcing,
communication to the organization with truthful
and valuable information - Addresses resistance
- Vision for technology possibilities and continual
innovation for positive organizational
transformations
- Lee, 2001
- Carmel, 2002
- Ba, et al., 2001
- Clemons and Row, 1991
- Keen, 1981
25Governance
- Both tactical and strategic to determine which IT
functions should be outsourced and to whom - Monitoring of expectations.
- Includes risk analysis.
- Includes security, privacy, and costs analyses.
- Flannery and Heckathorn, 2003
- Ba, et al., 2001
- Delmonte and McCarthy, 2003
- Sakaguchi and Raghavan, 2003
- Weill 2004
26Economics Cost Quality
- The balance of cost savings and access to IT
competencies when outsourcing IT/IS competancies. - Ensure that IT outsourcing decisions support
business strategy and enhance business
competitive advantage.
- Lacity, et al, 1995
- Willcocks, et al, 1995
- Watjatrakul, 2005
- Aubert, et al, 2004
- Manila, 2004
- Cox and Clift, 2003
27Contributions
- A comprehensive strategic management ITO
framework. - Each component can exist, perhaps in varying
degrees, based upon the situation. - Identification of key IS management and staff
skills to manage ITO partners. - An academic reference.
28Limitations
- Does not address how the components might be
affected by differences between offshore and near
shore outsourcings. - Measures of success vary across the literature.
- The framework does not address the type of IS/IT
outsourcing (e.g. application versus
infrastructure.) - Due to restrictions in access of current industry
research there is some empirical data that could
not be examined for the benefit of this paper.
29Conclusion
- The research of IT outsourcing and strategic
management literature provided a collection of
success factors that had not existed in one
document before. - Although the reader might be left with questions
about what are the discretionary components,
current practitioners can utilize the model as a
checklist of considerations, ensuring that they
have included all that is needed.
30Future Research Meta-data
- Validate or discount components in the framework
by comparing them to reported success factors in
secondary data. - Fjermestad and Hiltz (1999-2000) in their
assessment of empirical research on Group Support
Systems (GSS). - Romano and Fjermestad (2001-2002) on the topic of
electronic commerce customer relationship
management (eCRM). - A sample search of such data from Business Source
Premier between the years 1989 and 2005 on the
terms information technology outsourcing
yielded close to 20,000 hits. It is proposed
that the number of articles on the topic of IT
outsourcing will be in the 200 range. - This research has begun Example Company
Component Table
31Company Component Table
32Early Indicators
- Analysis of the limited data collected
(approximately 40 data points) yields initial
support for all of the components of the IT
outsourcing framework, especially since the year
2003. - Cost, governance, quality, and contracts
are the most reported drivers and factors during
2004-2005.
- During the latter part of the 1990s, it appears
that only cost (and sometimes quality) were
key considerations for IT outsourcing. - Not until after the year 2000 did companies begin
reporting success factors such as management
support and strategic partnership.
33The Research Questions
- Which components of the ITO framework are
indicators of success, as validated by a
meta-analysis of secondary trade/industry data?
(Limitation success can be defined differently
for each org.) - Do the components of the ITO framework vary based
on near shore or offshore, based upon
meta-analysis of secondary trade/industry data? - Do the components of the ITO framework vary based
upon type of outsourcing, e.g. application
development versus infrastructure? - Is the ITO framework inclusive, or under which
conditions are all or parts required?
34Published Works/Conferences
- ISOneWorld March 2005
- Published Chapter on ITO
- International Conference on Global Outsourcing
September 2005 - Best Paper Award
- JIST 2005
- JITCAR 2005
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