Support and development are often taken for granted – we need it quick, because there is a demand which must be met, etc. This needs to be constructed to avoid common mistakes and reduced to the necessary components to profit from a smaller price tag.
There are some cost components, often hidden or unquestioned, which can cause higher cost. The following best practices shall help to reduce them.
Rising prices and costs are omnipresent, and so is Inflation (Inflation in May 2022 in the US was at 8,6% - highest level since 1981) and the usage of different currencies. All these variables add another layer of risk. In the meantime your company's needs and demands for implementing and using new technologies are also emergent.
This brings up the question “How to find the right resources to meet this demand while keeping budgets from exploding?”. About 64% of questioned IT executives have the same concern and see a lack of well-qualified staff as the main barrier to this in 2021 (compared to 4% in 2020).
The contract landscape is fragmented, often localized, or maintained on regional level. Doing a calculation for the next budgeting cycle on global levels is kind of a nightmare. So, is simply getting an overview a nearly impossible activity?
Thinking about the long run, this is a hint to strive for global service providers with a vendor management office that operates under clear conditions and scope. Usage of a limited number of frame contracts certainly will reduce complexity.
For the short run, at least an evaluation of contracts with large spendings on certain categories will provide an overview:
What is definitely beneficial before renegotiating is that you are aware of the following:
If you have for example two contracts, one with only some months to go and another one with a longer run time and the service provider is doing a good job – try to leverage from it. Bring the additional volume on the table and use your bargaining power.
Unclarity leaves room for ambiguity and leeway. Creating clearly defined job descriptions allows you to lower costs.
Experience is often seen as key. But each task requires a specific skill set and level of experience. Not all of them require more than 10 years practices in e.g., project management. Define skill sets and ensure a good mix of them. This lowers costs and ensures a certain level of quality at the same time.
The usage of a 24x7 support model is certainly convenient, but it usually comes with high costs. The surcharges, often hidden, are quite high compared to other support ranges, and there is a specific reason for it. In general, it is quite complicated to provide 24x7 coverage, and at the same time it is often not necessary at all.
It is built to ensure a fast turn-over time, short pick-up times, and a user-friendly end-to-end solution time, as it operates in a three-shift model. However, to operate it under stable conditions, the following components must be considered and coordinated. And unfortunately, these are the main price drivers.
Moving from a convenient-driven to a demand-driven support model will have the desired effect of reducing overall costs. This requires an assessment of needs, risks and costs. Balancing these factors depending on your individual requirements and based on a clearly defined decision matrix leads to cost reductions while maintaining the operation of core functions.
On-call service is a good option to reduce the costs for true 24x7 support. Instead of having a team working 24x7 in front of a workstation to support you day and night, opt for a reduction in the support time range (e.g., 16x5).
In order to better estimate the required time coverage, it is highly recommended to evaluate the distribution of tickets on an average working day. This makes it possible to immediately see whether 24x7 support has a fairly balanced workload throughout the day or whether there are spikes and peaks.
In case the distribution is not even balanced, the support is provided for non-critical applications, etc. a priority-based system can be invented.
Through this system, the typical three-shift system can be reduced to at least two shifts. Further reductions are still possible if the days are also limited, e.g. elimination of Saturday and Sunday. Then, the high-priority tickets are processed via the on-call service.
The on-call support agent only gets active if a ticket with a defined priority is issued. Otherwise, the agent will not start working. There are several ways to handle this:
A key factor of cost composition for support is based on the delivery location. Some common termini within IT service provisioning are Onshore, Offshore, and Nearshore. It defines the location of a support agent or team.
The location of the support influences the balance sheet – it can reduce or increase costs. A good mix is in general beneficial. However, a demand driven purchasing with transparent categories offers the greatest level of benefits.
This requires of course a certain maturity level of the vendor management office and a purchase process which supports it.
Evaluate your needs and define a smart mixture of locations. Setup an offshore delivery wherever possible. Wherever necessary, you should deploy a team with overlapping working hours and, overall of course, in sufficient volume.
Time and Materials (or Staff Augmentation) is certainly common. This simple approach is highly used and familiar to many persons within purchasing, vendor management, and IT operations. The reason for using the same TM approach repeatedly is very simple:
Staff augmentation always comes with limitations when compared with a managed service approach.
Managed services work on the basis of service level agreements and KPIs, and are generally not assigned to specific individuals. You also have the opportunity to hand over a lot of responsibility to the vendor. You no longer buy resources and manage them to achieve a specific outcome. Now you are just the customer buying a service or finished product.
Topic
|
Time and Materials / Staff Augmentation
|
Managed Services
|
Managing resources | Customer is responsible | Supplier manages its own resources |
Work evaluation | Individual performance measurement, time consuming | Predefined KPIs |
Cost Effectiveness | Operational cost can decrease, but overhead costs stay the same | Customer pays for a service, not for a person |
Delivery Focus | Skill orientation | Goal and threshold orientation |
Accountability | Customer is accountable for reviews, tracking deadlines, etc. | Customer is accountable for final approval of deliverables |
Pricing Model | Based on consumption | Based on SLAs |
Risk Management | Mainly at customer side | Mainly at supplier side |
Delivery Overtime | Contract is expanded, resources added, costs increased | Supplier needs to fulfil agreed deliverables without extra charging |
As you see in the table there are several topics that contribute to the 2 main reasons, why you should prefer a managed service approach: