Wednesday, December 6, 2006

Organizations Ripe for HR Outsourcing as They Seek Standardization, Ability to Focus on Business Issues

Hewitt Survey Finds Companies that Outsource HR are Realizing Benefits


Organizations are primed for human resources (HR) outsourcing as they look to standardize HR processes and focus on business issues, according to a new survey by Hewitt Associates, a global human resources services company. Hewitt’s research shows that companies that have already outsourced HR activities are satisfied with their outsourcing arrangement and are realizing the benefits they hoped to gain.


The survey of nearly 100 large U.S. companies representing 2 million employees finds that the top three pressures facing HR executives today are attracting, retaining and growing talent (67 percent), being able to better support the business by focusing HR on core capabilities (47 percent) and supporting business changes (41 percent). Talent issues and a focus on strategic capabilities continue to be priorities for the next two years.


In a likely effort to make HR more efficient and freed up to tackle the top issues facing HR executives, 91 percent of companies surveyed have undertaken steps within the last two years to improve the internal HR function, such as HR process re-engineering or standardization. In fact, nearly six out of 10 companies surveyed believe HR processes and policies must be standardized before implementing outsourcing activities.


“Companies are realizing that they need to standardize HR processes and policies as a first step in their HR transformation,” said Mark Oshima, director of HRO strategy at Hewitt Associates. “This is often a precursor to outsourcing, since outsourcing enables both HR and line management to focus on issues vital to the business’s strategic initiatives, instead of being burdened with HR administration.”


The Motivation to Outsource


Hewitt’s research finds that organizations consider outsourcing primarily to improve service quality (ranked 4 or higher on a scale of 1 – 6 by 74 percent of respondents). Other key drivers include access to outside expertise, the opportunity for cost savings and a desire to focus resources on core business (all ranked 4 or higher by 60 percent or more of respondents).


Of those companies that have outsourced, 65 percent surveyed reported that they are satisfied or very satisfied with their current HR outsourcing arrangement. Furthermore, 70 percent of respondents say their companies have realized the benefits they hoped to gain from HR outsourcing.


Still, barriers to HR outsourcing remain. Nearly two-thirds of respondents say there are barriers to HR outsourcing at their organizations, with the top three being concerns about losing control of key processes, concerns about employee reactions to an external service provider and difficulty building a business case.


“By and large, companies that have taken the leap and outsourced their internal HR activities are realizing the results and goals they hoped to attain,” said Oshima. “Remember, though, that outsourcing is a major commitment. Companies considering HR outsourcing should identify the business issues that outsourcing is expected to address, build a solid business case, involve key decision makers, learn from the experiences of their peers and proactively manage the change from delivering services internally to partnering with an outsourcing provider. These important steps can help make the outsourcing arrangement a successful one.”


Other key research findings:


* The majority of respondents (78 percent) prefer an HR outsourcing provider with in-depth HR consulting expertise versus a broad outsourcing provider that can provide services to multiple parts of the organization.
* Forty-four percent of respondents indicated that cost savings was not one of the primary objectives they hoped to gain by outsourcing. Among those for whom cost savings was a primary objective, nearly three-quarters (73 percent) said they had achieved their cost savings objectives.
* The majority of survey respondents include service level agreements in their HR outsourcing contracts. Data delivery and transaction accuracy are the most common standards included in agreements, each cited by more than two-thirds of companies surveyed.
* The CEO is the final decision maker when considering HR outsourcing, cited by more than half (52 percent) of respondents


http://home.businesswire.com/portal/site/google/index.jsp?ndmViewId=news_view&newsId=20061206005056&newsLang=en


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