Let us look back and yearn for the days when technology management was plain
and simple – you either managed systems in-house or outsourced technology to
an external service provider.
Such simplicity is now very last millennium and technology leaders are
bombarded with sourcing options. But which trends are simply created by
hype-loving industry analysts and marketing specialists?
Well, to start with there was standard IT outsourcing, where non-core
technology operations are managed by an external supplier.
The term IT outsourcing dates from the 1980s and was complemented in the
mid-1990s by business process outsourcing, when users began to externally manage
white-collar, management functions.
Then, a few years ago, technology leaders began to doubt long-term contracts
with suppliers that were not always providing value for money.
Benchmarking led to contract cuts and the return of service provision
in-house – insourcing.
At the same time, suppliers from overseas started to offer deals to users
that were looking to outsource IT and business processes.
For UK businesses, overseas contracts were either managed nearshore – in
Europe, for example – or offshore, through an Indian or Chinese supplier.
And during the past year, external service management has become messy, with
value-seeking users selecting a broad range of contract types from different
providers.
This approach to provision has been widely termed multisourcing, which
everyone says is the future of outsourcing, because users now need to be smart
and ensure specialists are covering each part of the business. But you can
guarantee multisourcing will be the next big thing in outsourcing… until
something bigger comes along.
Forrester
Research is already complicating – or attempting to explain, depending on
your point of view – the sourcing mix by referring to the growth of “activist
outsourcing”
(forrester.computing.co.uk).
Here, users aim to boost IT performance by managing the full lifecycle of
each supplier relationship.
In the end, many of the trends are merely different flavours of the same product
– outsourcing.
It is your decision whether such trends provide clarity or are simply used to
push more products to users.
What do you think? Read Mark Samuels’ blog at:
http://knowledge.computing.co.uk
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