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Article

How to improve performance when managing offshore contracts

Information Systems
Published on:

IT firms increasingly rely on outsourcing the development of information systems overseas, yet an astounding 50 percent of such projects fail to meet client requirements. A study focusing on contract specification and different modes of contract implementation has found ways to improve cost and quality performance.

"outsourcing" word on a world map

Outsourcing to distant countries used to be about tapping into the lower costs and specialized skills of foreign labor markets, such as by making textiles in Bangladesh and electronic parts in Taiwan or Singapore. Now, with new information technologies and the digitization of the economy, it has become increasingly common to outsource services as well, including the development of information systems. India in particular, with Bangalore as its Silicon Valley, has become the leading destination for such projects, catering to nearly 60 percent of global requirements for offshore information systems development. And yet, an astounding 50 percent of such projects fail outright or do not meet client requirements. However, HEC researcher Shirish Srivastava noticed that the rate of failure was going down in the U.S., which is a more mature market than France for offshore development, and turned to control theory to analyze this improvement in performance.

Distinguishing control mechanisms

It is through the exercise of control that companies can motivate vendors to deliver applications that meet the needs of their clients. HEC’s Shirish Srivastava worked alongside the National University of Singapore’s Thompson Teo to fill in what they saw as gaps in existing control theory. While the academic literature had already examined formal and informal modes of control (such as contracts, shared norms, and so on), the two co-authors sought a more nuanced understanding of control. They described the process mechanisms at work within different modes of control; i.e. how the control is enacted as opposed to what control is used. Almost all outsourced client-vendor relationships function under the broad framework of a formal contract (the structural control mechanism), which defines the type of work expected, the delivery date, and so on. The contract may go into great detail or not, but the involved parties choose how closely they will follow its specifics. If it is implemented to a tee, then the contract governance is mechanistic. If the parties instead rely on mutual trust to deal with operational situations as they emerge, then the mechanism is one of relational governance. In that case, if for example the project is delayed, says Shirish Srivastava, then client and vendor negotiate to potentially charge less or extend the deadline. In other terms, the contract may go into great detail, but the parties can choose to implement it selectively. “It’s a very simple idea, but it had not yet been conceptualized and examined in the academic literature,” adds the researcher.

The effects of governance on performance

Based on a study of 160 information systems development projects carried out in India, the researchers looked at the effect on performance of mechanistic governance, first in relation to contract specification, then coupled with relational governance. Their first finding was that mechanistic governance (the kind that does not allow deviations from pre-specified outcomes and procedures) serves as a good complement to contract specificity. As Shirish Srivastava explains, the quality of information systems tends to be defined with objective criteria (the number of allowed bugs for example). Costs, on the other hand, perhaps counter-intuitively, are a “fuzzier concept” and consequently less easily defined by contract. So where the contract is detailed, mechanistic governance, by ensuring close adherence to the contract, enhances quality and cost performance. However, relational governance is somewhat more effective to improve cost performance, because as a process it allows for more leeway, such as in the negotiation of rates for example. “In such a fast-moving industry as information systems development, a client can suddenly see that competitors are offering better prices than his vendor, which will prompt him to bargain,” explains Shirish Srivastava. “Conversely, if a vendor sees that his client is not enforcing penalties despite delays, he can see it as a favor and work harder in exchange,” he adds.

Focus on cost or performance

Last but not least, the researchers fine-tuned their results by distinguishing between the two main types of contracts in use in the industry:

1) fixed price contracts, whereby an agreed-upon sum is paid for the final product, regardless of the actual costs incurred by the vendor; and

2) time & material contracts, whereby the client pays a daily (or hourly) rate for the work provided by the vendor. In the latter case, the client bears most of the risk.

When examining the effects of relational and mechanistic governance on performance, the results were broadly similar to those of the full model. The only major difference was that relational governance seemed to have an adverse effect on cost performance for time & material projects. The reason is that such contracts tend to be used in two very different cases: either when clients have clear knowledge of the work requirements, and for all practical purposes manage the work, merely using vendors as additional human resources; or, alternatively, in pure development work, with no precise idea of the outcomes or standards. In the latter case, process control (either mechanistic or relational) does not add any value to the process.

Applications

Focus - Application pour les marques
The methodology could be applied immediately. Professor Pérignon is cautiously optimistic about the Basel Committee adopting the suggested improvement concerning the foreign exchange effect. He is less confident that it will drop the cap system, highlighting the fact that US lobbyists have so far been very good at getting the system to protect their banks: “They decided to lower the capital of the largest custodian banks (high substitutability score), all of them being US banks,” he notes. The researchers put together a website, sifiwatch.org, with all the data they collected about SIFIs. Every year, the website also discloses the new list of SIFIs, several months before the official announcement by the Financial Stability Board, with so far remarkable accuracy. “The economic impact of SIFIs is huge, but the risk data for these banks are not available in a centralized way and sometimes hard to get. Our website provides transparency,” says Pérignon. Last but not least, their methodology is potentially applicable to sectors that require similar risk scoring, such as insurance or asset management.

How did you test this theory?

Focus - Methodologie
The research team used data from the World Values Survey (WVS), a database launched in 1981 that holds the specific features, opinions and behaviors of 200,000 people from around the world aged 15 to 82. They selected 30 questions with the highest statistical coverage and compared data from 1989 to 2004 and then designed quantitative indicators for the cultural distance between two countries. They drew on the cultural transmission model of Alberto Bisin and Thierry Verdier for their theoretical basis.
Based on an interview with Shirish Srivastava and the article “Contract performance in offshore systems development: role of control mechanisms” (Journal of management information systems , 2012), co-written with Thompson TEO. Syntec Management Consulting attributed the 2013 Academic Award in Management Research for the Best Published Academic Paper to Professor Shirish Srivastava for this paper, submitted in the category Operations, Management, Control / Information Systems & Technology.

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