When I first started working in banking, the industry was at the peak of its obsession with offshoring. All I ever heard about for the first three years of my career was offshoring this and offshoring that. If I wasn't working with a team offshore, I was working with a team that was about to be.
Offshoring had become something of an El Dorado for the industry – the myth had become so tantalising that any semblance of realism was lost. And much like the hundreds of explorers who succumbed to the temptation of looking for the lost city of gold, banking executives bought into the hype. Offshoring was going to save the banking industry millions. We just had to do it. Every other industry was. It made perfect sense. How could the talent locally compete with India or China? These countries had more students graduating with MBAs every day than we had students – period. Banks invested millions in setting up offshore campuses all over Asia. There were assimilation programs, training courses and cross-pollination of resources. Special two-way video screens were even purchased – it was Skype before Skype.
Banks tried ever so hard to make it work. In some cases they even pretended everything was going according to plan. But firms were taking one step back for every two steps forward. From a set-up perspective, the regulatory and cultural challenges were underestimated. On paper, employees were cheaper, but more were required. Offshore staff was not as efficient and rework was common. Frustration at home was further exasperated by having to deal with poor communication lines. The media was quick to jump on any negative customer experiences.
Besides not delivering the benefits expected, offshoring was actually adding overhead to projects and processes. There were challenges with communication as teams worked at different hours around the world. Local and offshore teams were suspicious of each other – both felt as if the other was slacking off. It also necessitated an overreliance on email messages and lengthy documentation. Offshoring also made it practically impossible to adopt more innovative delivery models such as Agile that rely on face-to-face interaction. The final nail in the coffin was the genuine appreciation that teams developed better products collaborating in the same environment.
Finally, it dawned on the industry: El Dorado didn't exist. Now, after many years of searching and coming up empty-handed, offshoring has lost its appeal and banks are starting to bring the work back home.
So why does onshoring make so much sense in banking? With both China and India growing year on year, the cost savings are less appealing. Wage growth in these regions means that the difference in salaries, compared to local talent, has become increasingly marginal. Banks are also more focused on the cost reduction opportunities offered by an increase in digital channel usage and a decline in branch activity. Regional branch closures are expected to grow again this year. There is also an acceptance that delivering quality technology now, more than ever, relies on face-to-face interaction. Having a team full of people co-located and empowered means not only an improvement in product quality, but a significant increase in time-to-market.
Whereas offshoring was once considered a competitive advantage, it is now considered the opposite. More and more banks are looking to bring jobs back home, and even analysts and investors are starting to ask questions. The key to the transition is to do it smartly. No more inflated business cases. No more forced changes. By onshoring too rapidly you run the risk of making the same mistake most banks did with offshoring. Have clear objectives so you can easily decide what roles or departments are going to grow locally.
























































To be very honest, the views expressed by the author are a standard excuse given by people who are insecure. While outsourcing decision should not be taken in haste, both sides of the story should be evaluated. An informed decision can make a big difference in not only reducing the cost but to deliver improved quality.
My Great Example is that I was asking questions about unemployment when I was downsized, let-go, staff-reduced, whatever and I was calling the Ohio Unemployment Office about and I was transferred, get ready for this to an overseas service rep. I am not going to mention country, that is not really that relevant.
I asked the gentlemen on the other end if he knew where the call was coming from and he said yes, the State of Ohio Unemployment Office. I asked him if he thought it was ironic? And he asked what that meant, and I said I was downsized due to off-shore sourcing and now I am calling the State's office and I my call is off-shored?
He then said we are getting a lot of these calls because the Ohio Office is really busy. I was like interesting. That leaves me not only a headache because of the hypocrisy, but just being plain "tupid" missing the "s" because it is beyond studip lol.
Not sure if people know history there was time when US & EU was putting pressure on countries to open up their economies.
Have a cake and eat it too?
Not sure if people know history there was time when US & EU was putting pressure on countries to open up their economies.
Have a cake and eat it too?