Indian IT outsourcing vendors have moved beyond the cost and
process efficiency and moved towards Outcome-based models which is being paid
on performance like improving total sales, working capital reduction,
bottom-line improvement, etc, rather than one based on the number of people
deployed. This model is best suited when the cost of change management is high
or when there is an under-utilization of people. It is also best suited when the
outcome is process-oriented and when the customer have accurate baselines,
well-defined, measurable service levels and performance goals, and be willing
to accept the provider’s solution to meet requirements. This model is more
vendors driven and they try to complete the work as soon as possible, using the
most efficient processes and reducing costs. The vendor is relying on client and client on vendor for outsourcing success
and risk is transferred from client to vendor. Vendor should account for
transference of risk and cover that by including a risk premium in the price. Indian
Vendors have realized that the golden-age of T&M and throwing people at a
problem has ended and they have already moved into fixed-cost deals and
outcome-based contracts are the next step.
Outcome based contracts/pricing started to come into
prominence in 2007 when the Global Financial crisis started unraveling and
businesses were facing slowdown and IT budgets were tightened. Businesses
started looking at IT Vendors for more value. In a survey conducted by InformationWeek
in early 2008, 20% of 430 IT pros working with Indian outsourcers cited the
"ability to tie project costs to business goals" as a key benefit
that would prompt them to work with an outsourcer again. 31 % cite
"understanding our business and industry" as an area that's improved
significantly over the past year. Indian Vendors
were focusing more to understand the clients business as whole and not
restricting themselves only to the IT department. In 2008 Outcome based contracts
or pricing was in a nascent stage where IT vendors just started to understand
the significance of this model and how they are going to adapt this model.
Businesses too due to the financial crisis and budgetary pressures started to
work closely with vendors and provide them access to their business so that the
vendors become a strategic partner who will help them in achieving the
organizational goals.
Tata Consultancy
Services Limited (TCS)
TCS has begun using a new success-based pricing in 2006 in
some of its outsourcing contracts it signed with Pearl Insurance in UK , Tata
Teleservices and Chilean TranSantiAgo in the last seven-eight months. Such
success-fee based contracts accounted for about 4% of TCS’s revenues in 2007. In
the Pearl contract, TCS has changed the entire
business process and replaced the 13-odd IT systems floating in the company
with a single system. In the TranSantiAgo case, which is a transportation
contract, TCS’s job is not just to find a cheaper and better way of designing
the new transportation system, but even generate demand for the new system. In
2008, TCS won a project from the Ministry of External Affairs to automate
passports and is paid a combination of project fee and an outcome fee based on
the number of applications it processes.
TCS has been very careful in adopting this model and structuring deals around measurable goals. In 2009 this model accounted for about 1% of the company’s total revenue and outcome-based projects are yet to become mainstream.Recently TCS' British BPO subsidiary, Diligenta, signed a deal to take over the IT and customer services functions of the UK’s Friends Life and it is based on outcome-based pricing and TCS will charge per policy to the client. With this deal TCS has shown that it is still looking out for outcome-based model.
TCS has been very careful in adopting this model and structuring deals around measurable goals. In 2009 this model accounted for about 1% of the company’s total revenue and outcome-based projects are yet to become mainstream.Recently TCS' British BPO subsidiary, Diligenta, signed a deal to take over the IT and customer services functions of the UK’s Friends Life and it is based on outcome-based pricing and TCS will charge per policy to the client. With this deal TCS has shown that it is still looking out for outcome-based model.
Infosys Limited
Infosys took first steps into the managed services sector in
2008 through a business unit based on an “outcome-based” pricing model, moving away
from charging per man hour toward what it calls a “software-assisted services”
model. At Infosys, 50% to 60% of deals in the enterprise services group have
some kind of outcome-based pricing. Infosys do not peg all the revenue to
outcome based pricing as business outcome can be measured only after a period
of time and there are other variables in the environment that can impact the
outcome. So part of the fees (around 10-20%) is tied to the end result or
outcome and the remaining gets billed through traditional models. Infosys
signed a deal to support manufacturing, supply chain, finance, HR and other
applications of AstraZeneca in 2008 and
services delivered through a global shared-services model that offers
“fixed price for outcome-based deliverables, and flexible, unit pricing for
managing changes in the base scope of the engagement.
Infosys in 2010 signed a deal to manage internal IT services
for Microsoft worldwide through an outcome based pricing model, enabling
Microsoft to associate and manage IT costs directly to business variables and
demand. Recently Infosys launched TalentEdge, a comprehensive talent management
platform that deepens employee engagement and the platform built on
state-of-the-art technology and is delivered in the Cloud on an outcome-based
pricing model. The sales team is constantly encouraged to pursue outcome based
billing. Infosys management has given the mandate to push up the contribution
of such outcome-based contracts from 3-4 % of revenues to 20 % in three years,
translating into a $1 billion target.
Wipro Limited
Wipro had invested in outcome based models since 2008 and had
been seeing increased customer interest as this result based model has inherent
benefits like improvement in service levels and end-user experience.
FlexDelivery is one such model for managing enterprise applications and Wipro
had six clients using this model out which three were added in first quarter in
2008. IT also launched Cigma (Center for Integrated Global Management of
Applications) for manufacturing clients with the unique capability of providing
an outcome based model based on SLA ’s (service
level agreements) as well as BLA’s (business level agreements) to customers.
Wipro aims to get 50 percent of its sales by 2012 from orders where it shares
risk with clients seeking to cap their costs to boost its own profitability.
Wipro gets major portion of the contracts worth $500 million
following its acquisition of Citigroup's captive IT arm in India 2008, based on
outcome-based model. Friends
Provident had signed a three-year contract for the provision of IT Application
Development and Support services from Wipro Limited in 2009 and the contract enables Wipro to offer
increased value in an outcome based engagement model through process
excellence, higher offshore leverage, and greater accountability and ownership
in delivering projects. Wipro signed a 10-year total outsourcing contract with TVS in 2010
which includes the comprehensive suite of IT infrastructure and
applications across the enterprise and engagement would be governed by a unique
mix of milestone-based, business outcome-based and operations-based Key
Performance Indicators (KPIs). In June 2011 Wipro won an outcome-based deal
from Chaucer Syndicates, a specialist insurer at Lloyd’s, to develop an
end-to-end regulatory compliance solution that would generate better analytics
and improved management reporting for the client.
Cognizant Technology
Solutions Corp
Cognizant is also using an ‘outcome’ or ‘effect-based’ model
to provide services by leveraging its global delivery network, talent pool and
best practices. Outcome-based pricing is a very small piece of Cognizant
portfolio and it expects that this model will evolve in future as the customers
believe the vendors are capable of providing the relevant services and business
value and manage the risk efficiently. Cognizant’s earliest projects based on outcome were with pharmaceutical
company AstraZeneca and with Sanofi Pasteur, where there was an increase in
effectiveness as measured by time. For 3M too, Cognizant used an outcome-based,
managed service engagement model with productivity benefits over the long term.
HCL Technologies Limited
HCL Technologies
missed the Y2K boat and therefore pioneered the use of ‘outcome-based’ pricing.HCL
Technologies has a higher risk appetite and has a large proportion of its
revenue coming from outcome-based pricing — a model where larger the profit for
the customer, larger the revenue gain for the IT vendor. HCL earns 25% of its
revenue from the Infrastructure service segment and the outcome-based model had
helped them win big contracts. HCL has a revenue sharing arrangement with Cisco,
CA and an output-based pricing arrangement to develop software for Boeing 787
Dreamliner. HCL has transformed its scope of public sector services and its
open view toward outcome-based contracting is well-appreciated by governments
in their bid to address greater efficiencies and as part of business and
technology risks mitigation. HCL Technologies sees a trend in UK towards
outcome-based contracts.
Outcome-based
Contracts/pricing not yet picked up
Analysts estimate that while less than 5% of offshore contracts are currently outcome-based, this trend will pick up in 2011. NASSCOM estimates that 10% of total revenue is coming from outcome-based contracts/pricing for the Indian Outsourcing Industry. Nasscom believes that the industry is beginning to move beyond time-and-materials pricing. About 40% of the industry's total transaction value now comes from fixed-price deals (irrespective of the number of man hours spent). Despite the outcome-based model in prominence since last four years, the volume did not pick up inIndia . This
model is best suited for existing clients and for new clients who have a clear
understanding of the model and in this models both vendors and clients should
ensure that the scope of the engagement and the outcomes are clearly defined.
Analysts estimate that while less than 5% of offshore contracts are currently outcome-based, this trend will pick up in 2011. NASSCOM estimates that 10% of total revenue is coming from outcome-based contracts/pricing for the Indian Outsourcing Industry. Nasscom believes that the industry is beginning to move beyond time-and-materials pricing. About 40% of the industry's total transaction value now comes from fixed-price deals (irrespective of the number of man hours spent). Despite the outcome-based model in prominence since last four years, the volume did not pick up in
The success of this model lies in the understanding of
the customer’s
business model, operations and industry nuances and how to manage risk involved
at all stages. Risk is high for the vendors and they charge premium and since
they cannot wait for payments till the business outcomes, only apportion of the
revenues are being done on the outcome-based pricing. Business outcomes are
time consuming. The clients and vendors should have a common
basis for future
value creation and vendors should be clear as to how much risk
he can bear and how well he knows his own processes and business. Other
external variables also have to be taken into account and for the model to
succeed both the client and vendor should have a strong and open relationship
between them so that they can achieve the planned common outcome. Customers prefer such billing models because they
can keep their costs entirely variable and dependant on their own revenue
growth.
Discussion Points:
- Why is Outcome-based
Contracts/Pricing not picking up in Indian IT Outsourcing Industry?
- What percentage of revenues should come from the outcome-based model?
- How to manage the higher risk by the Vendors and are they equipped to manage such risks?
- Has Indian IT outsourcing Vendors matured enough to tackle the complexities involved in outcome-based model?
- What should be the strategy of clients/consumers in the outcome-based model?