OCM Assignment Infosys
OCM Assignment Infosys
OCM Assignment Infosys
Among the largest hurdles companies face when establishing and institutionalizing global sourcing programs are employee fears of the unknown and, in some cases, outright resistance. This is especially true with relationships involving vendors in other geographies that speak different languages, operate in other time zones, and, most importantly, belong to a different set of social norms and values. Recognizing these challenges, sourcing decision-makers are seeking partners capable of delivering solutions to address these concerns. Infosys' Organizational Change Management (OCM) competency provides such solutions.
Introduction With the growing acceptance and maturity of global sourcing, business and IT executives are increasingly realizing the need for effective change management. They recognize that if left unaddressed, employee concerns and fears about working with foreign business partners over extended geographies could cause stress and operating pressures. These challenges may be difficult to identify and could result in problematic transitions and productivity losses. In extreme cases employees may even resort to unconventional practices such as interfering with program efforts or even sabotage.
Although decision-makers often overlooked these challenges in the past, many are now planning for specific programs designed to address such concerns. To support this need, Infosys offers strategic and tactical solutions to help clients effectively manage change by addressing employee-related issues that arise during the multiple stages of a global sourcing initiative.
of these elements and the resulting changes are not managed well, lower productivity, a dip in service levels and/or a higher level of employee turnover can result. As the initiative progresses, employees will begin to ask difficult questions such as: "Is my involvement on this initiative a means-to-an-end?" or "Will I lose my job upon completion of transition?" These questions, if left unanswered by management, will create an implicit resistance and an employee communication vacuum. The resistance, once started, will be difficult to stop. The communication vacuum will help to fuel rumors and innuendo, which will be quickly spread by e-mails, phone calls and other communication mechanisms.
To address this challenge and to answer such questions, Infosys recommends that the following best practices be deployed and wherever possible, maintained throughout the lifecycle of the initiative: Establish a Change Team that is supported by senior leadership and consists of representatives from each of the key business and IT areas impacted by the change; Integrate the Change Team with other program teams such as the Transition Management Team and the HR Team; Proactively reach out to employees and ensure that their concerns are heard and addressed; Develop and implement specific risk mitigation strategies relating to employee retention; Develop communication and training programs that are comprehensive and consistently delivered across the organization; and Communicate, communicate, and communicate! From a strategic sourcing perspective, engagements will typically affect a client's IT organization and the interrelationships that exist between the IT groups and their business partners. For both parties, role adaptation will be a key hurdle and will be one of the greatest challenges that affected personnel will face. These individuals will need to move from their stable local environment, to an unstable transition environment, and then eventually to a new global steady-state environment.
Identification of mission-critical skills (and employees) at the start of the program Execution of retention tactics including retention bonuses for mission-critical staff, early notification of continued employment for retained employees (including notice of specific positions wherever possible), and severance payments linked to specific exit dates for Morale problems relating to staff reductions. Retained employees in the client's IT organization may suffer a variety of morale and motivational problems if staff reductions accompany the global sourcing program. Critical mitigations include: Ensure that released employees are treated with respect and are offered significant separation assistance. Retained employees will closely watch how released employees are treated. Ensure that a clear business rationale exists, and is communicated, for undertaking the global sourcing program. Make it clear that staff reductions are not the result of poor performance at an employee level. Ensure that a rigorous process is used for selecting retained vs. released employees. Employees must not perceive the selection process as either random or capricious. New managerial skills requirements. Global sourcing typically introduces a range of operational changes such as moving the client from a "Project Management" way of operating to a "Program Management" way of operating.
Because development resources operate in a different country, onsite managers must learn to trust their offsite counterparts. They will also need to learn to focus on managing outcomes instead of managing the resources responsible for creating outcomes.
Conclusion
The transformation of a client's IT organization and its ability to move from the current-state to its future-state is highly dependent on its most important asset: its people. As such, the end goal of Infosys' Organizational Change Management competency is to help our clients secure stakeholder commitment upfront, invest in their ability to move forward and to manage their concerns, whether local or global, on an ongoing basis from conception through to the realization of actual business benefits.