Parents of young, robot-obsessed children will
recognize Optimus Prime as the chief hero of the good guys in the Transformers
line of toys, comics and the blockbuster movie now in theaters (other brand
extensions hitting your pocketbook soon).
There's a neat synchronicity here: The most visionary
companies are starting to recognize transformation as the hero of outsourcing,
with the best service providers filling out the ranks of the good guys. This is
no small vision, as the tide today is taking a great number of companies toward
the offshoring model, as I wrote last week.
Part of what's great about the buzz about
transformation in outsourcing is what it's not: "Transformation" has
long been bandied about as "consultant speak," but the transformation
that we're hearing more about is something bigger - and we're hearing it from
clients and contacts, not consultants.
I've written previously about the increasing use of
outsourcing to drive change around the scope of the deal itself - and beyond
it: When services are outsourced, with
attendant standardization and consolidation, that process serves
as a catalyst to enhance how all the work that touches those services is
organized and delivered. Clients are factoring these derivative benefits into
their cost evaluations and giving the best service providers an opportunity to
create broader benefits for the clients.
Now we're also seeing the truly visionary, ambitious clients
look to outsourcing as a way to migrate older operations - systems,
applications, and processes - to Brave New World models. In this new world, the
contract is less about defining which assets are affected and more about
capturing the emerging capabilities of BPO, software-as-a-service, and other
models for improved efficiency.
For these firms, the essential make-versus-buy
question is swinging toward "buy," because the alternative of
carrying forward legacy operations increasingly is untenable: Can I modernize
myself, or should I outsource - and structure the contractual terms accordingly - to produce real, fundamental change and to pay for services in a very
different manner?
The Transformers - the companies and organizations
really seeking fundamental change - are stepping up, looking to move beyond complex,
costly, and confused legacy applications. They look like heroes to me, and I'm
betting their own customers will come to feel the same way.