1. Field of the Invention
The present invention generally relates to business outsourcing and, more particularly, to a process for assisting the identification of companies or organizations that might be preferentially inclined to outsource a component of their business.
2. Background Description
Organizations are increasingly outsourcing non-core components of their businesses. The reasons for outsourcing span the spectrum from the need to focus on core operations to the need to reduce cost and control expenses. When a component of the business is outsourced, it is transferred to a provider. We use information technology (IT) outsourcing as an example for clarifying the subject of our invention. However, it is important to realize that the technique presented here is general and can be applied to address outsourcing any component of a business.
Over the past twenty-five years, we have witnessed the evolution of computers from mainframes that required air conditioned buildings and specialized staff, to desktops and laptops that are easy to use and operate. Most businesses realized that in order to be efficient, their information must be captured and stored in electronic form, so that it can be accessed and searched when needed. As a result, industries, such as airlines, banks, and manufacturers to name a few, invested billions of dollars in building an information technology infrastructure. As a matter of fact, companies often used the sophistication of their IT infrastructures to distinguish themselves from their competitors. This trend became even more pronounced with the introduction of the Internet. Through the Internet, businesses found a low-cost vehicle that can reach every potential customer, regardless of his/her geographic location.
Today, the IT spending of any company, large or small, consumes a sizable amount of its budget. Furthermore, today's competitive market place requires each company to be efficient in it's spending, particularly when it comes to IT, where the latest technology could be obsolete in six to twelve months. As a result, many companies opt to outsource their IT operations to firms that specialize in operating IT efficiently and reliably.
The negotiations of an outsourcing deal are complex and lengthy. For an outsourcing provider, the negotiation phase often costs millions of dollars and requires an army of technical and legal experts. As a result, an outsourcing provider is often interested in ranking potential new customers and targeting those that are more likely to outsource.
Conversely, if there are several potential opportunities and if the provider has limited resources, then the provider needs to rank these opportunities so that the probability of success is maximized. This invention is a process that can be used by the provider to rank its potential customers in the order of their likelihood or propensity to outsource.
It is generally held that companies most likely to consider outsourcing are those that are experiencing poor financial performance, or that have had recent changes in executive management or other significant events such as a merger or acquisition. Prior approaches to the customer-targeting problem have been largely empirical in the following sense. A relatively small set of metrics summarizing the overall financial conditions of each company are obtained, each metric is multiplied by an empirically-determined “weight factor”, and a “propensity score” is then computed simply as the sum of these weighted features. A key deficiency in this approach is that no rigorous attempt is made to choose the weight factors such that the resulting scores are verifiably higher for companies that did actually outsource. Hence, if the selected features or their specified weights are incorrect, the resulting scores will be of little utility in predicting which companies are likely to outsource.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a process or methodology for ranking a large number (“universe”) of potential outsourcing customers for the purpose of identifying companies that appear to have an increased likelihood or propensity to outsource some aspect of their business operations.
According to the invention, we do the following:
6. We apply the predictive model to the extracted features for each company in the “universe”, computing the probability that this company belongs to the class of positive examples. The computed probability is used as a score indicating the company's propensity to outsource, and sorting these scores yields the desired ordered list of companies to be targeted.
The user of the proposed process may be (a) a decision maker within an organization that is interested in marketing its outsourcing services to potential customers; (b) an intermediary who brokers outsourcing deals between customers and providers; or (c) a market intelligence agency that is interested in comparing and valuing companies as they relate to outsourcing propensity. In the case of our example of IT outsourcing, (a) outsourcing providers include such companies as Accenture, Computer Sciences Corp. (CSC), Electronic Data Systems (EDS), and Hewlett-Packard (HP); (b) intermediaries include companies such as TPI; and (c) market intelligence agencies include Gartner Group, Metagroup, and Forrester.
In the process according to the invention, outsourcing can include managing or owning some or all of the operations related to the outsourced processes. The operations may include business functions, IT services, computer support, call centers, accounting, human resources, procurement, transaction processing, and customer-relationship management. The operations may also include manufacturing, procurement, marketing, sales, distribution, transportation, and pricing.
Outsourcing by an entity or company can include management or ownership of some or all of the assets related to the outsourced processes. These assets may include computers, servers, computer storage devices, data centers, network infrastructure, network routers, web servers, and staff. Alternatively or in addition, the assets may include machines, assembly lines, trucks, vehicles, airplanes, and freights.
As used in the invention, positive pre-existing outsourcing instances may include some or all entities that outsourced operations in the past. Negative pre-existing outsourcing instances can be based on the pre-existing positive instances. Alternatively or in addition, negative pre-existing outsourcing instances can be dictated by business experts and/or captured from public information.
As used in the invention, the extracted features include financial information, such as stock price and credit rating. Other extracted financial information may include cash flow, gross profit margin, return on assets, expenses, revenue, receivables turnover, credit rating, earning per share, return on equity, inventory turnover, diversification, spending, public and government filings, management, press releases, mergers and acquisitions, accounting discrepancies, layoffs, earning announcements, and labor disputes.
As used in the invention, the score generated is a numerical value which represents the likelihood to outsource and the uncertainty of this likelihood. This score is a discrete value representing the likelihood to outsource and the uncertainty of this likelihood.
The foregoing and other objects, aspects and advantages will be better understood from the following detailed description of a preferred embodiment of the invention with reference to the drawings, in which:
Referring now to the drawings, and more particularly to
Function block 112 involves the identification of actual historical examples of companies that have signed outsourcing contracts with any provider of such services. These examples are obtained from publicly available news filings describing outsourcing deals involving large total contract amounts using, for example, data mining techniques. The name of the company that signed the contract, and the date of the signing, uniquely defines a “positive” example.
Function block 114 involves identification of a set of companies and corresponding dates at which it is believed that these companies are highly unlikely to sign an outsourcing agreement. The name of the company unlikely to outsource, and the date of this predisposition, uniquely defines a “negative” example. Negative examples can be chosen in several ways, including the following:
Function block 116 involves identification of a set of companies that are considered to be potential candidates for outsourcing. There can be thousands of potential customers represented as “candidate” examples. The objective of the overall process is to predict the likelihood or propensity that each of these candidate companies will enter into an outsourcing contract at the current date. Ranking these companies yields the Targeting List output by function block 160 in
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Function block 130 represents the process of reducing the information defined in function block 120 to obtain a set of metrics or explanatory “features” which can be used as input to a mathematical model (function block 140) designed to predict the propensity for outsourcing of each company. The specifics of this process are described in
Each example is processed using different logic based on the type of example as determined in decision block 131. The objective of this process is to identify a “signal” period in function block 132 preceding the date associated with the example. The signal period refers to the time over which the features will be defined. This period is chosen to provide the most information about the expected likelihood of this company signing an outsourcing contract at the date associated with the example. Based on the selection of the signal period, the trends, means, and counts of financial metrics and event data are computed in function block 133, as described in more detail with reference to
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Referring now to
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While the invention has been described in terms of a single preferred embodiment, those skilled in the art will recognize that the invention can be practiced with modification within the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10758530 | Jan 2004 | US |
Child | 12057816 | US |