Product Type: Market Research Report
Published by: Business Intelligence
Published: February 2004
Product Code: R125-70Description Some companies have made dramatic improvements to the efficiency and effectiveness of HR through the introduction of shared services. But as many companies have discovered to their cost, there is no guaranteed payback from moving to shared services.
One survey found that while half the companies surveyed targeted savings of 20 per cent or more from the move to shared services, this was achieved by only a third.
Over a quarter of the organizations surveyed achieved less than 10 per cent savings.
Yet, for some companies the returns have been substantial. Standard Chartered achieved an $8 million saving with its move to HR shared services. Nor are savings the only form of payback. The introduction of shared services helped Scotiabank to raise its customer service performance to number one position for two years running.
Ten steps to success
The report identifies the ten essential elements that underpin successful planning and implementation and shows how these factors are applied by high-achieving companies. Companies that implement effective HR shared services are successful because they:
- Win management support
- Plan for success
- Design for efficiency and service
- Communicate and consult
- Build strong staff resources
- Create a service culture
- Draw on your e-HR strengths
- Set the right goals
- Apply the right measures
- Drive the process forward
HR Shared Services - Achieving the business benefits provides you with a clear analysis of all these principles and illustrates, with practical examples, how to put them into practice.
Use HR Shared Services - Achieving the business benefits to help you to:
- Create a robust business case for HR shared services
- Develop a sound implementation plan
- Evaluate the options of retraining existing staff or recruiting new staff
- Establish which HR services to transfer to a shared services centre
- Win buy-in from operational managers
- Gain the enthusiastic support from senior management
- Balance improved service delivery with lower cost operations
- Develop Service Level Agreements that are realistic and practical
- Identify customer needs and opportunities for adding value to the business
- Use web-based systems to implement self-service
- Handle the change management challenges posed by shared services
- Anticipate and handle staff resistance
- Establish meaningful measures of service performance
- Redesign processes to maximize the benefits of shared services
- Determine the most appropriate location for a shared services centre
- Choose the most appropriate form of shared service centre for the organization
- Balance the relative merits of shared services and outsourcing
- Reposition HR as a strategic partner in the organization
- Assess your own capabilities to migrate to shared services
- Plan your own route to effective HR shared services.
The report will also tap the knowledge of a number of expert advisors to provide a guide to best practice, as well as the common pitfalls to avoid, including
- Bob Cecil and Laura Sandstrom, Gunn Partners, an Exult Company
- Ron Bradley, Corporate Renaissance Group
- Andrew Muras, President, Mevatec Group
- Laurel Forst, Amherst Group
- Andrew Kris, Akris.com.
Table of Contents - Author Profile
- Acknowledgements
- Overview:From Outsourcing to Insourcing:the development of the shared services concept
- Executive Summary
- The move to outsourcing and the birth of shared services
- Developing the outsourcing concept
- Outsourcing HR Services
- The core and non-core services debate
- Shared Services as an alternative to outsourcing
- From cost to value: developing a customer-service ethic
- The report: remit and recommendations
- A roadmap for success
- The main issues addressed in the report
- Case Studies: Best practice lessons and advice
- Eastern Health Shared Services
- Procter&Gamble
- Standard Chartered Bank
- Sun Microsystems
- Scotiabank
- Realizing the Potential of Shared Services
- Ten steps to creating an effective shared services centre
- Win management support
- Plan for success
- Design for efficiency and service
- Communicate and consult
- Build strong staff resources
- Create a services culture
- Draw on your e-hr strengths
- Set the right goals
- Apply the right measures
- Drive the process forward
- Section 1:Making the Business Case
- Executive Summary
- Establishing the business basis for shared services
- When to choose shared services
- Making the case:identifying the business benefits
- Cost saving potential
- Alcoa Inc case report
- Increased efficiency plus improved customer service
- Making the case: The benefits to the HR function
- Eastern Health Shared Services case report
- Key options:When to use shared services and when to outsource
- Standard Chartered Bank case report
- Key options: which services to include and exclude
- How companies balance the options
- How shared services can help to reposition HR
- Self-assessment checklist
- Section 2: Creating a Robust Plan
- Executive Summary
- The principles of sound planning for HR Shared Services
- Gaining buy-in at all levels of the organization
- Eastern Health Shared Services case report
- People-combining the right skills and capabilities
- Standard Chartered Bank case report
- Costing, valuing and redesigning processes
- Procter&Gamble case report
- Teams-for knowledge sharing and problem solving
- Sun Microsystems case report
- Scotiabank case report
- Information technology
- Telecommunications equipment manufacturer case report
- Web-based or virtual shared services delivery
- Scotiabank case report
- The next wave for shared services development
- Self-assessment checklist
- Section 3: Evaluating and Re-engineering Processes
- Executive Summary
- Avoiding the technology trap
- Identifying core and non-core processes
- Evaluate the benefits of moving processes to a shared service centre
- Weighing the full costs of moving to shared services
- Motorola case report
- Deciding whether to re-engineer prior to the move
- Sun Microsystems case report
- Identifying best practice benchmarks
- Champion International case report
- Establishing the geographical coverage of shared services
- Standard Chartered Bank case report
- Self-assessment checklist
- Section 4: Culture and People Issues
- Executive Summary
- The change management challenge
- The need for communication strategy
- Make use of informal networks
- Procter&Gamble case report
- Retaining the staff you want to keep
- Eastern Health Shared Services case report
- Recruiting new talent
- Procter&Gamble case report
- Scotiabank case report
- Training
- Shell people services case report
- Job satisfaction and career development issues
- IBM ask HR case report
- Creating a service culture
- Easter Health Shared Services case report
- Self-assessment checklist
- Section 5: Aligning HR Services with Customer Needs
- Executive Summary
- Ensuring a customer focus from day one
- Champion International case report
- Should the centre act like a business
- The benefits of commercial operation
- Procter&Gamble case report
- Scotiabank case report
- Internal marketing
- Applying service level agreements
- Service level agreements as living documents
- Eastern Health Shared Services case report
- Self-assessment checklist
- Section 6: The Future of Shared Services
- Executive Summary
- Potential largely untapped
- Scope for shared services growth
- Eastern Health Shared Services case report
- Standard Chartered Bank case report
- Section 7: Case Studies
- Sun Microsystems
- Standard Chartered Bank
- Procter&Gamble
- Eastern Health Shared Services
- Scotiabank
- Section 8: Frequently Asked Questions
- References
|
|