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Implementation and Transition
Implementation and Transition




According to McKinsey research, in 2005 only 4-8% of worldwide large offshore software engineering
market is related to packaged software R&D, and most of that has occurred only in the last 4-5 years.

Independent Software Vendors (ISVs) and Application Service Providers (ASPs) are challenged to
innovate faster than its competition and deliver their products to market first, supplement their
development teams and re-balance their development priorities in order to accelerate revenue
generation. Management and investors want to lower total cost of ownership and increase shareholder
value. Due to the standardization of software engineering processes, pricing pressure and margin
compression, evolving enterprise customer expectations, software companies are forced with the task of
delivering more complex product development with limited and decreasingly time frames.

Accelerating consolidation activity is a symptom of increasing competitive pressure, which is in turn driven
by fundamental changes in customers' purchasing behavior.

To overcome all or some of the above problems more and more software companies turn to Product
Outsourcing i.e. hiring external vendors to develop a product for the company.




The life cycle of an outsourcing engagement for software company usually consists of six distinct phases.
The diagram below illustrates their chronological order and the way they build on each other (Exhibit 2.1):

Exhibit 2.1




An effective governance model should include metrics, payment models, the change in the relationship
management, the pricing structure and fees, the intellectual properties, the termination options, the rights
and restrictions of both outsourcer and company and the liabilities.


                                                                                  © Altoros Systems    2
Implementation and Transition



This phase compromises of the decisions required so that the outsourcing process is well established.
The goal of the Implementation and Transition is to implement the actions, policies, and procedures
charted in the Preparation Phase. Active personnel recruitment is underway and stable business
relationships are established based on tangible work interactions. One or more pilot projects are executed
in order to transfer knowledge and to provide the core team with subject expertise. This is an opportunity
for the staff to master the customer's domain, business processes, and technologies through actual
experience.

This phase is characterized by:

1. Predictable and steady workflow
2. Established expertise and knowledge transfer
3. Management based on performance metrics and established procedures
4. Production of acceptable deliverable
5. Continuous development and improvement




A rewarding outsourcing relationship begins with clearly defined expectations that can be easily
understood from both the company and the outsourcer and allow a more shift and smooth outsourcing
management process.

An effective governance model should include metrics, payment models, the change in the relationship
management, the pricing structure and fees, the intellectual properties, the termination options, the rights
and restrictions of both outsourcer and company and the liabilities.

They also must include Service Level Agreements (SLA's) whenever this is feasible. It is very important
that all outsourcing contracts have terms for both termination of cause and termination of convenience.
Some exit considerations may be centered on people, equipment and intellectual properties.

Table 2.1.1.




 Define legal terms:                                        Define service:

      Obligations, rights &                                      Definitions
       responsibilities
                                                                  Requirements & expectations
      Guarantees
                                                                  Metrics (like KPIs)
      Liability
                                                                  Relationships
      Termination


 Usually stay:                                              Usually stay:

 Air tight and very dusty                                   In use and under change

 Written for: Service failure                               Written for: Service success




                                                                                  © Altoros Systems    3
Implementation and Transition




A typical organizational structure of an offshore outsourcing engagement for a software company is
roughly illustrated in the diagram below (Exhibit 2.2.1):




Customer and outsourcing provider usually assign a person or a team to manage evaluation and
selection process. Then the customer and the provider work together to conceptualize and to re-confirm
the scope of work, the goals, and the activities of the outsourcing engagement:

1. Project identification
2. Deployment plan, including milestones, schedules of knowledge transfer, sequence of project
launching, etc.
3. Offshore development team organizational structure and governance
4. Team roles and responsibilities
5. Recruitment process
6. Software development process, methodology and metrics
7. Communications, reporting, and escalation procedures
8. Dedicated IT infrastructure (set-up and maintenance)
9. Office infrastructure, location, and security, including communication Equipment
10. IP rights protection

Outsourcing providers should be included in planning. A provider can be very helpful in project planning
once he knows what the company strategy is and where the company is headed.

In addition, incentives should be used to increase benefits. If the providers are motivated, they can be
stretched even further to meat outsourcing objectives and thus more benefits for the company.



In order to manage the established offshore team effectively, the outsourcing provider and the customer
continue to communicate and to work together on all organizational levels. They select managerial team
and define their duties. Forrester Research (2003) suggests the following communication schedule for
different levels of participants:

Outsourcing providers should be included in planning. A provider can be very helpful in project planning
once he knows what the company strategy is and where the company is headed. Incentives should be



                                                                                 © Altoros Systems     4
Implementation and Transition



used to increase benefits. If the providers are motivated, they can be stretched even further to meat
outsourcing objectives and thus more benefits for the company.

Table 2.2.2.1




 Steering Committee     Senior                    Escalation issues                Quarterly

 VP of Engineering      Management                Customer satisfaction            User goes offshore
                                                                                     once per year

                                                  Resource allocation

                                                  Process                          Vendor goes onsite
                                                                                       once per year

                                                  Savings and productivity
                                                     gains

 Offshore Program       Account Manager /         Consistent issues across         Monthly (1-2 hrs)
 Office                 Program Manager            program management
                                                                                    User goes offshore
                                                     teams
                                                                                       twice per year

                                                  SLAs

                                                  Best practices

                                                  Escalation issues

                                                  Future innovations

 Project                Project Delivery          Planned vs. executed             Weekly (1-2 hrs)
 Management Team        Team                       progress

                                                  Communications

                                                  Frequency of questions

                                                  SLAs

                                                  Outstanding issues

                                                  Dependencies

                                                  Project Context review



                                                                                © Altoros Systems       5
Implementation and Transition




Regardless of size and maturity, offshore outsourcing is on the agenda of early staged, mid-
sized and large software companies for many different reasons. Cost reduction is typically
the basis for offshore outsourcing, but the big picture for ISVs and ASPs is to build, retain
and maintain its customer base by constant innovation. Global outsourcing is an option
vendors are exploring to remain cost competitive as operational difficulties associated with
global outsourcing are gradually removed.

Having the right strategic offshore roadmap and governance model is critical.

Outsourcing strategy checklist

BACKGROUND INFORMATION
Why outsourcing is needed?
How can outsourcing by used as a strategic tool?
What are the expectations from outsourcing?
DECISION MAKING
Who will decide what to outsource?
Who will select the outsourcer?
Who will approve variations to the outsourcing agreement?
Who will approve budgets, timelines and deliverables?
COMMUNICATION
With whom should the company communicate?
What will the outsourcer want to know and when?
What is the best way to conduct communications?
ENSURING A SUCCESSFUL OUTSOURCING PROCESS
What are the critical success factors?
What are the risks?
How does one overcome risks or problems?
What are the assumptions to be made before proceeding?
RESPONSIBILITIES
What are the company's responsibilities?
What are the outsourcers?
What knowledge - skills are required?
ASSETS - STAFF AND LICENSES
What assets, staff or licenses need to be acquired?
What assets, staff or licenses need to be transferred?
What assets, staff or licenses need to be redeployed?
What assets, staff or licenses need to be disposed of?
OBLIGATIONS - LEGAL MATTERS
Are there copies of all arrangements and agreements?
Is there any consent to be obtained from third parties?
Are there any obligations after the outsourcing process begins?



Renat Khasanshyn is CEO of Altoros Systems, Inc. www.altoros.com


                                                                         © Altoros Systems   6

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Outsourcing Life Cycle: Implementation and Transition

  • 2. Implementation and Transition According to McKinsey research, in 2005 only 4-8% of worldwide large offshore software engineering market is related to packaged software R&D, and most of that has occurred only in the last 4-5 years. Independent Software Vendors (ISVs) and Application Service Providers (ASPs) are challenged to innovate faster than its competition and deliver their products to market first, supplement their development teams and re-balance their development priorities in order to accelerate revenue generation. Management and investors want to lower total cost of ownership and increase shareholder value. Due to the standardization of software engineering processes, pricing pressure and margin compression, evolving enterprise customer expectations, software companies are forced with the task of delivering more complex product development with limited and decreasingly time frames. Accelerating consolidation activity is a symptom of increasing competitive pressure, which is in turn driven by fundamental changes in customers' purchasing behavior. To overcome all or some of the above problems more and more software companies turn to Product Outsourcing i.e. hiring external vendors to develop a product for the company. The life cycle of an outsourcing engagement for software company usually consists of six distinct phases. The diagram below illustrates their chronological order and the way they build on each other (Exhibit 2.1): Exhibit 2.1 An effective governance model should include metrics, payment models, the change in the relationship management, the pricing structure and fees, the intellectual properties, the termination options, the rights and restrictions of both outsourcer and company and the liabilities. © Altoros Systems 2
  • 3. Implementation and Transition This phase compromises of the decisions required so that the outsourcing process is well established. The goal of the Implementation and Transition is to implement the actions, policies, and procedures charted in the Preparation Phase. Active personnel recruitment is underway and stable business relationships are established based on tangible work interactions. One or more pilot projects are executed in order to transfer knowledge and to provide the core team with subject expertise. This is an opportunity for the staff to master the customer's domain, business processes, and technologies through actual experience. This phase is characterized by: 1. Predictable and steady workflow 2. Established expertise and knowledge transfer 3. Management based on performance metrics and established procedures 4. Production of acceptable deliverable 5. Continuous development and improvement A rewarding outsourcing relationship begins with clearly defined expectations that can be easily understood from both the company and the outsourcer and allow a more shift and smooth outsourcing management process. An effective governance model should include metrics, payment models, the change in the relationship management, the pricing structure and fees, the intellectual properties, the termination options, the rights and restrictions of both outsourcer and company and the liabilities. They also must include Service Level Agreements (SLA's) whenever this is feasible. It is very important that all outsourcing contracts have terms for both termination of cause and termination of convenience. Some exit considerations may be centered on people, equipment and intellectual properties. Table 2.1.1. Define legal terms: Define service:  Obligations, rights &  Definitions responsibilities  Requirements & expectations  Guarantees  Metrics (like KPIs)  Liability  Relationships  Termination Usually stay: Usually stay: Air tight and very dusty In use and under change Written for: Service failure Written for: Service success © Altoros Systems 3
  • 4. Implementation and Transition A typical organizational structure of an offshore outsourcing engagement for a software company is roughly illustrated in the diagram below (Exhibit 2.2.1): Customer and outsourcing provider usually assign a person or a team to manage evaluation and selection process. Then the customer and the provider work together to conceptualize and to re-confirm the scope of work, the goals, and the activities of the outsourcing engagement: 1. Project identification 2. Deployment plan, including milestones, schedules of knowledge transfer, sequence of project launching, etc. 3. Offshore development team organizational structure and governance 4. Team roles and responsibilities 5. Recruitment process 6. Software development process, methodology and metrics 7. Communications, reporting, and escalation procedures 8. Dedicated IT infrastructure (set-up and maintenance) 9. Office infrastructure, location, and security, including communication Equipment 10. IP rights protection Outsourcing providers should be included in planning. A provider can be very helpful in project planning once he knows what the company strategy is and where the company is headed. In addition, incentives should be used to increase benefits. If the providers are motivated, they can be stretched even further to meat outsourcing objectives and thus more benefits for the company. In order to manage the established offshore team effectively, the outsourcing provider and the customer continue to communicate and to work together on all organizational levels. They select managerial team and define their duties. Forrester Research (2003) suggests the following communication schedule for different levels of participants: Outsourcing providers should be included in planning. A provider can be very helpful in project planning once he knows what the company strategy is and where the company is headed. Incentives should be © Altoros Systems 4
  • 5. Implementation and Transition used to increase benefits. If the providers are motivated, they can be stretched even further to meat outsourcing objectives and thus more benefits for the company. Table 2.2.2.1 Steering Committee Senior  Escalation issues  Quarterly VP of Engineering Management  Customer satisfaction  User goes offshore once per year  Resource allocation  Process  Vendor goes onsite once per year  Savings and productivity gains Offshore Program Account Manager /  Consistent issues across  Monthly (1-2 hrs) Office Program Manager program management  User goes offshore teams twice per year  SLAs  Best practices  Escalation issues  Future innovations Project Project Delivery  Planned vs. executed  Weekly (1-2 hrs) Management Team Team progress  Communications  Frequency of questions  SLAs  Outstanding issues  Dependencies  Project Context review © Altoros Systems 5
  • 6. Implementation and Transition Regardless of size and maturity, offshore outsourcing is on the agenda of early staged, mid- sized and large software companies for many different reasons. Cost reduction is typically the basis for offshore outsourcing, but the big picture for ISVs and ASPs is to build, retain and maintain its customer base by constant innovation. Global outsourcing is an option vendors are exploring to remain cost competitive as operational difficulties associated with global outsourcing are gradually removed. Having the right strategic offshore roadmap and governance model is critical. Outsourcing strategy checklist BACKGROUND INFORMATION Why outsourcing is needed? How can outsourcing by used as a strategic tool? What are the expectations from outsourcing? DECISION MAKING Who will decide what to outsource? Who will select the outsourcer? Who will approve variations to the outsourcing agreement? Who will approve budgets, timelines and deliverables? COMMUNICATION With whom should the company communicate? What will the outsourcer want to know and when? What is the best way to conduct communications? ENSURING A SUCCESSFUL OUTSOURCING PROCESS What are the critical success factors? What are the risks? How does one overcome risks or problems? What are the assumptions to be made before proceeding? RESPONSIBILITIES What are the company's responsibilities? What are the outsourcers? What knowledge - skills are required? ASSETS - STAFF AND LICENSES What assets, staff or licenses need to be acquired? What assets, staff or licenses need to be transferred? What assets, staff or licenses need to be redeployed? What assets, staff or licenses need to be disposed of? OBLIGATIONS - LEGAL MATTERS Are there copies of all arrangements and agreements? Is there any consent to be obtained from third parties? Are there any obligations after the outsourcing process begins? Renat Khasanshyn is CEO of Altoros Systems, Inc. www.altoros.com © Altoros Systems 6