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Canadian outsourcing satisfaction rates plummet

Canadian outsourcing satisfaction rates plummet

By:  Briony Smith  On: 29 Jul 2007 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

IDC data indicates enterprise customers aren't happy with their contracts, their vendors and their overall experience of handing off IT functions. The service providers, however, have a much different impression

Also read and comment on another IDC Survey: Business managers spend a quarter of their time on IT

An increasing number of Canadian IT companies are displeased with their outsourcing vendors, according to an IDC Canada survey released last week.

IDC Canada did an outsourcing satisfaction survey in 2004, with this recent survey revisiting similar indicators such as the number of referrals and contract renewals.

Mark Schrutt, IDC Canada’s research manager for outsourcing services, said, “Business satisfied with their outsourcers dropped from 50 per cent to 33 per cent.”

Relationship management satisfaction went from 71 per cent to 54 per cent, while contract management satisfaction drooped as well. Said Schrutt: “ Every element had a 15 to 20 per cent drop.”

He attributes this drop in satisfaction to the rising expectation of companies who use outsourcers. “Clients are expecting more now, with better returns and strong value,” said Schrutt. “The vendors are trying to meet them, but they’re having a challenge.”

These boosted expectations have been brought about by companies’ experience with outsourcers -- primarily, their struggles with flexibility. Schrutt said that businesses are having to deal with changing technology, costs (hardware is cheaper, but software and services are more expensive), and the role of IT in the business, and outsourcers are having a tough time keeping up.

According to John Simke, president of the Toronto-based Centre for Outsourcing Research and Education, many outsourcers are guilty of trying to force clients into a template, or telling them what to do instead of working with them.

But the customers are striking back. Simke said, “What we’re dealing with now is the savvy client. They’re far more demanding, so the level of satisfaction has gone down,” he said.

Service needs to be worked on, according to Schrutt, who said, “Vendors need to meet the business and technology needs, and work together in a cooperative and flexible approach.”

Schrutt also found that there was a marked discrepancy between the vendors’ and the companies’ impressions of the services rendered, with many vendors placing customer satisfaction in the 80 to 90 per cent range. “Vendors measure how well they do, not how the relationship is doing, studying things like service delivery, account management, and practices and processes,” he said.

Also troublesome to clients is who conducts the customer satisfaction surveys: account managers or sales staff. Said Schrutt: “Customers don’t feel comfortable providing this information to the vendor.” Even third-party surveys don’t work, as, said Schrutt, customers think that the Canadian outsourcer customer market is small enough that the vendors would be able to identify them.


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Briony Smith Briony Smith 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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