In Full Bloom

To Outsource Or Not To Outsource, These Are The Questions

If Only We Could, Tea Party First!

Before Bill Kutik has a chance to tease me about the intensity (aka length and depth) of this post, be forewarned that there is serious “how to” material below.

Every organization outsources parts of HRM, almost no matter how your define outsourcing.  From using 3rd parties to do background checking or COBRA administration (both of which are always done with some flavor of BPO, with the provider supplying the people, process and technology) to using 3rd party assessments and drug testing services to every flavor of 3rd party payroll services, outsourcing is central to the HRM delivery system — and it has been for as long as I’ve been working.  So the question isn’t should we or shouldn’t we outsource but rather what, when, how, to whom, at what cost, with what governance, etc. 

The right way to approach HRM outsourcing is to consider this option for various HRM processes in the context of developing an overall strategic HRM and HRMDS plan.  Just “Follow The Yellow Brick Road” (https://infullbloom.us/?p=823  https://infullbloom.us/?p=848  https://infullbloom.us/?p=865  and  https://infullbloom.us/?p=885) to develop your plans if you don’t already have them. 

But with or without having developed such a strategic HRM and HRMDS plan, because of the prevalence of outsourcing in HRM, we’re always getting hit with the “Why don’t we outsource X?” questions.  The purpose of this post is to equip you to get in front of those expressions of outsourcing interest or opportunities for further outsourcing so that you’re not blindsided and immediately on the defensive.  Using these questions may buy you enough time to do a proper strategic HRM and HRMDS plan so that you’re not caught off balance by the next outsourcing suggestion/proposal.

When you’re faced with the “Why don’t we outsource X?” question, or preferably before you get that question, you should always ask (and be prepared to answer) the following:

If you think these are tough questions, the best are yet to come!  Here are more zingers for evaluating any unsolicited outsourcing suggestions/proposals that come at you, not as an intended and very sensible byproduct of strategic HRM and HRMDS (human resources management delivery systems) planning—although they’re useful in that context as well—but as a response to the “Why aren’t we moving more aggressively to HRM BPO?” question often asked by a returnee from the latest provider briefing or sales event cloaked in thought leadership.  Here we go:

As strongly as I support the use of HRM outsourcing — from gaining access to expertise via the use of expert resources to using business applications packages rather than “rolling our own” to every flavor of HRM and IT process outsourcing — there really are some outsourcing proposals that should be drowned at birth.  Hopefully, some of the above questions can be used, judiciously, as the cement shoes for that purpose.  But even when the outsourcing suggestion/proposal is otherwise reasonable, when it has emerged during a well-run strategic HRM and HRMDS planning project, there are still many questions you need to ask to address the fit between the outsourcing suggestion/proposal and your way business needs and way of doing business.  There are also important questions about what potential providers can offer, and why you would consider a specific approach and provider.  Sounds like we’ll need some more intense posts before we leave this topic.

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