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Are your outsourcer's prices too low?

Are your outsourcer's prices too low?

By:  Stephanie Overby  On: 17 Mar 2010 For: cio.com Creator

It’s good to benchmark your outsourcer's prices periodically against the market. If you find your provider's rates are too low, that could signal red flags

It's always a good idea to benchmark your outsourcer's prices periodically against the market. But what if you find that your IT service provider's rates are too low?

 

It could happen. And it's not usually a good thing. While every benchmarker, client and outsourcer has an opinion about acceptable variances in IT service rates, outsourcing prices that come in at more than 20 percent below the market rate are red flags.

 

Prices that are too low can lead outsourcing vendors to issue more change orders for work they claim is beyond the scope of the original contract. Bargain basement prices can also push vendors to replace skilled staff with lower-cost personnel and innovate less. And they can lead to poor service that may not be covered by the client's service level agreements (SLAs.)

 

"Many service level agreements are written to provide the customer with relatively little protection; the targets are easy for the vendor to meet, while the actual service fails to adequately address the business needs," says Bob Mathers, principal consultant with Compass Management Consulting in Toronto. "If the vendor is making a fair margin, client and vendor can work together to close this gap. If the vendor is bleeding, they are more apt to stick to the letter of the contract and provide nothing more, leaving internal IT groups to pick up the slack."

 

Services Likely Priced Too Low 

Under-pricing can show up in almost any area of service--except storage, where costs fall so fast it's hard for outsourcing contracts to keep up. Areas of service that tend to experience flat or marginal price declines over time, such as service desk or desktop support, often end up priced too low down the line.

 

"Also, if the client environment changes over the life of the contract in a way that makes it more expensive to support--decentralization or greater complexity--and prices have not increased to reflect these changes, that may result in contract prices that are below market," adds Mathers.

 

There can be valid reasons for cut-rate pricing, but that's less likely in today's mature outsourcing market. "If a vendor organization can leverage particular capabilities to lower their costs, they have a competitive advantage that may allow them to lower their pricing while maintaining margins," says Mathers. "That said, there are few levers left for vendors to pull. If a benchmark shows pricing to be below market, and the benchmark properly accounted for all material drivers of price in the services, it is safe for the client to conclude that the vendor most likely has lower-than-market margins."


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stephanie overby Stephanie Overby is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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