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Revision as of 04:18, 30 April 2004 by Watcher (talk | contribs) (added mention of Internet freelancing, a very major issue nowadays)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)"Outsourcing" became a popular buzzword in business and management in the 1990s. It was a welcome addition to the business vocabulary as, prior to the introduction of the term, the domestication decision involved a decision to either produce in-house or a decision to produce outside. Introduction of the terms outsourcing and out-tasking gave managers much-needed words for external production.
Outsourcing and out-tasking involve transferring a significant amount of management control to the supplier. Buying products from another entity is not outsourcing or out-tasking, but merely a vendor relationship. Likewise, buying services from a provider is not necessarily outsourcing or out-tasking. Outsourcing always involves a considerable degree of two-way information exchange, co-ordination, and trust.
The concept started with Ross Perot when he founded Electronic Data Systems in 1962. EDS would tell a prospective client, "You are familiar with designing, manufacturing and selling furniture, but we're familiar with managing information technology. We can sell you the information technology you need, and you pay us monthly for the service with a minimum commitment of two to ten years."
Organizations that deliver such services feel that outsourcing requires the turning over of management responsibility for running a segment of business. In theory, this business segment should not be mission-critical, but practice often dictates otherwise. Outsourcing business is characterized by expertise not inherent to the core of the client organization.
A related term is out-tasking: turning over a narrowly-defined segment of business to another business, typically on an annual contract, or sometimes a shorter one. This usually involves continued direct or indirect management and decision-making by the client of the out-tasking business.
The international context
With the rise of Globalisation, many companies are turning to either offshoring or offshore outsourcing. Offshore outsourcing more and more takes the shape of Business Process Outsourcing, where whole business processes (such as support and development) are outsourced. The client is usually free to choose who provides the outsourced business processes, while stock market's press the company to do more for less, and this requires that managers search out the cheapest sources they can find. In countries like India and China, companies like IBM, Microsoft, Hewlett Packard, and Novell choose to get services from sub-contractors in these countries or move many development and support jobs there. Smaller businesses can also take advantage of freelancing on the Internet to get smaller projects done by offshore developers at minimum cost.