In recent years, the general administrative operations of large organisations have been moving toward a global business services (GBS) model of shared services, with offshore centres housing behind-the-scenes tasks like invoice processing. The influence of GBS is increasing, with 41% of CFOs recently indicating their finance work was performed by a shared services organisation.
The purpose of the modern GBS is to act as the IT gateway, controlling the flow of information coming in and out of the business. It exists to centralise back-office structures, protocols, governance, and measurement tools, and bring that to the rest of the business in a coordinated way. Because GBS knows more about processes, owns more data and leverages more technology than any single function, it holds the keys to digital transformation for companies at large.
Given the enterprise-wide importance of GBS, the fact that so many organisations lacked the business continuity capability to cope with COVID-19 disruption dealt a hammer blow to many businesses.
The events of 2020 have impacted everyone in the space, but one thing has been clear: highly digitised GBS organisations have seen a far lesser degree of disruption to their delivery models. GBS leaders of the more old-school persuasion now have a serious job of rapidly future-proofing.
Moving forward, the most successful organisations will be those most capable of limiting operational risks relating to the availability of feet-on-the-ground – and they can achieve this by designing and deploying virtual workforce models that can be scaled up or down to match service delivery requirements, and improve business decision-making with insights gleaned from the data constantly flowing through the GBS.
As HfS Research noted in their still-seminal article ‘Robotistan’, on how Robotic process automation (RPA) arrived to shake up the outsourcing industry, the goal should be to “hand off your dullest, most rote outsourcing work to robots so your human workers could take on more engaging tasks”.
Get on the front foot. Future-proof your GBS adoption
GBS organisations can no longer get by on the weather-worn method of finding a cheap outsourcing location, assembling staff and carrying out a simple knowledge transfer. The digital age demands greater agility, better speed, a completely different skill set for talent, and a forward-thinking CFO.
As the central data repository of so many processes that touch every aspect of a company’s operations, GBS can be a gold mine of information. With the right digital tools in place, it can become the driver of gold standard decision-making.
However, few businesses are at this stage of development. McKinsey’s analysis finds that fewer than 20% have the necessary building blocks to do so; “some have the data, but not the right platform for analysis; others have the platform but lack the right data, or can’t access it in a useful way.”
We’d like to help put this right. Get in touch with us to discuss how to lead the way with a future-proofed GBS model.