Research on offshore outsourcing: a systematic literature review.
Mohiuddin, Muhammad
INTRODUCTION
Offshore outsourcing' is a comparatively new research area in
international business field. Globalization and accelerated competition
as well as ever increasing consumer demand for value have pushed firms
to look for new way of value creation through efficient use of limited
resources. Offshore outsourcing is one of the way through which the
firms try to address the new requirements of the marketplace. Indeed,
there is evidence that outsourcing contributes positively to market
value (Alexander and Young, 1996). However, there exist lots of
divergences among the practitioners, politicians, public in general and
researchers on the offshore outsourcing concepts, factors and
performances. The lack of strong theoretical development has accelerated
the debate on the pertinence of offshore outsourcing. However, offshore
outsourcing research is gaining momentum in International Business,
Strategic Management and Supply chain management field. Though most of
the previous research was on macro-level as well as dealing with the
social and job related issues. The new research trend has started to
investigate in economic aspects of offshore outsourcing research with
firm level empirical data. In this paper, different avenues of emerging
research issues are addressed through the use of extensive systematic
literature reviews of previous researches.
CONTEXT AND FUTURE INSIGHTS OF OFFSHORE OUTSOURCING RESEARCH
The theoretical developments as well as offshore outsourcing
research have been developed multifaceted. The most important questions
in offshore outsourcing remains, according to the various literature
reviewed, "the way to outsource successfully". What really
interests to the practitioners in outsourcing from a research
perspective is that why do some succeed and others fail in their
outsourcing endeavors'?" The performance issues in offshore
outsourcing and effects of the outsourcing on firm performance have,
indeed, been identified also in the literature as one of the issues that
still call for further investigation (Gilley and Rasheed, 2000; Mol et
al., 2004; Quelin and Duhamel, 2003). A fundamental problem in
addressing outsourcing performance is that the question of "how
success in outsourcing should be evaluated" has not been examined
thoroughly (Harland et al., 2005). As the performance can be evaluated
against various different criteria, it would be important to find out
which ones are the most relevant and what issues should be taken into
consideration when selecting the performance criteria. According to the
MGI study (Balasubramanian and Padhi, 2005),
"The highest levels of satisfaction and performance were
reported by client companies that focus their offshoring performance
metrics on a limited number of goals. Clients have relied on an
assortment of detailed, mostly cost-focused metrics that failed to frame
their strategic objectives and achieve sustained performance
improvement. Successful client-supplier partnerships are moving away
from such legacy reporting systems, which reinforce the micromanagement
aspects of the staff augmentation model".
The offshore outsourcing performance is not determined by a single
factor alone or only on cost-focused measures, it is the correct
management of the entire outsourcing process, from the start to the end
of the outsourcing process management which leads to either a successful
or a failed outsourcing endeavor. With increasingly varied offshore
outsourcing activities, we need integrative tangible and intangible
measurements in order to qualify either success or failure in offshore
outsourcing initiatives. The following issues are utmost important, in
this regard, to take into consideration in future offshore outsourcing
research.
Towards Multi-dimensional Offshore Outsourcing Research
Economic globalization, which creates interdependency among
countries, is characterized not only by trade of goods, services and
know-how and very often the intermediate goods, but also by the
development of New Global Division of Labour (NGDL) phenomena (Su,
2009). The NGDL refers to the fragmented production system of goods in
several locations around the world in order to take advantage of certain
benefits associated with the cost and quality of production factors such
as labour, skills, energy, capital, innovation, potential markets etc.
According to Berger (2006), "in the world of fragmented production,
the issues are what they have always been: profits, power, security and
new opportunities. What has changed is that it is now possible firms to
achieve these goals by positioning themselves at any segment of
"value chain" of the product." In the context of a
"modular world", a product is now most often "made in
world" than manufactured only by one single country. In other
words, several countries contribute to the different parts of the value
chain, based on their strengths or competitive capabilities and all
enjoy the benefits accordingly. The current offshore outsourcing falls
in this NGDL thematic where firms look for not only cost advantages but
also for knowledge and innovation from the offshore outsourcing
relationships (Mohiuddin, Su, Su, 2010).
The theoretical literature on the firm's decision to produce
in-house or outsource through market contracts is extensive and dates
back to Coase (1937) and his theory of the firm. This theory is known as
transaction cost economics (TCE) and implies that firms should produce
goods in-house if the 'transaction cost' of market transaction
is higher and if this cost is lower, firms should procure this goods
from the market. Surprisingly, little material relating to the principal
aspects of international outsourcing has been published in academic
journals. Mol et al. (2005) found that from 1989 to 2000, only 7
articles contained the words "global" and
"sourcing". Recently, however, the attention on the foreign
aspects of the phenomenon has grown (Antras and Helpman, 2004). The
majority of this work has most commonly focused on either transaction
cost theory, or, the principal-agent framework (Ono and Stango, 2005) as
well as on the Resource based view (RBV). According to the
resource-based view (RBV), core resources and core capabilities are the
major factors which allow an enterprise to sustain its competitive
advantage (Prahalad & Hamel, 1990). Those resources and capabilities
must be valuable, rare, imperfectly imitable, and non substitutable
(Barney 1991). This approach suggests that a firm should invest in those
activities that constitute its core competences and outsource the rest
(Prahalad and Hamel, 1990).
However, due to the dynamic changes in business environment,
enterprises need to adjust or enhance their core resources and core
capabilities to match current environmental evolution. According to the
knowledge-based view (KBV), the dynamic core competence will be the
major factor for enterprises'/alliances' ability to sustain a
competitive advantage in today's value chain competition (Grant
1996). The networking or partnerships among the firms are considered
very effective strategic decisions to encompass processing complexity,
new market development, new product development and economies of all
kinds (D'Amours, Montreuil, Lefrancois, Soumis, 1999).Via learning
and knowledge/information sharing; the enterprise can enhance its
dynamic core competence. Dynamic core competences are based on an
enterprise's integration into systemic meta-learning of universal
and tacit knowledge through information transfer, redefinition of
heuristics, and continuous improvement based on experimentation and the
development of firm-specific skills based on dynamic routines (Lei et
al. 1996). Dynamic core competences (DCC) can be leveraged to create
growth alternatives for global diversification, new applications of
existing technologies and/or the development of new lines of business
(Lei et al. 1996).Dynamic core competences can be used to reduce
uncertainty and to induce path dependencies that create causal ambiguity
(making imitation from other firms difficult). In so doing, they can
form the basis of competitive advantages (Lei et al. 1996).
Outsourcing could also have productivity enhancing effects at a
more aggregate level if offshoring would lead to the creation of new
firms, and the destruction of old ones (Antras et al., 2004). This
process is often associated with Schumpeter's theory of creative
destruction, and numerous empirical studies have provided support for
its positive impacts on productivity (Bartelsman et al., 2003). Other
relevant theories have examined the potential for productivity enhancing
effects due to knowledge spill-over as well as firms' abilities to
focus on core competences by outsourcing relatively inefficient
activities. To compete in increasingly competitive economic
environments, decisions to offshore company activities are essentially
driven by factors related to costs of production, distribution and
productivity. From the perspective of the firm's offshoring, it is
therefore seen as a part of its business strategy. For instance, if
offshoring enables a firm to relocate its relatively inefficient
production processes to external providers with cheaper and perhaps more
efficient production capabilities, the firm can turn its focus to areas
where it has a comparative as well as competitive advantage and expand
output, or engage in new business activities.
Firms determine its outsourcing strategy on the basis of
shortcomings in resources or capabilities. Grant (1991) points out that
the organization's competence depends on its capability to combine
resources and organizational processes to meet the desired objectives.
Grant (1991) also states that the conventional approach to the creation
of resources has focused on the company's lack of resources and
capabilities. In other words, in order to exploit certain resources,
firms need to acquire external complementary resources which it does not
possess. Thus, the firm is not limited to exploiting its own stock of
resources and capabilities (Das and Teng, 2000), but can cover its
shortcomings by purchase or strategic alliance, one form of which is
outsourcing. Therefore, suppliers can also be considered resources that
consolidate the organization's internal competencies.
This perspective does not examine, however, the interrelationships
and advantages when two or more organizations in the supply network
unite to develop relational rents that could contribute to the
development and maintenance of competitive advantage (Dyer and Singh,
1998). In view of this theoretical limitation, other determining
variables in the outsourcing strategy must be considered. When firms
outsource, they must consider the possibility of associative advantages
for their internal and relational capabilities. The associative
advantage would be the competitive advantage (Porter, 2005) achieved
through a relationship between firms. The teaming upon companies to form
business networks seems to be a promising competitive strategy since it
permits the partner companies to concentrate on those activities of the
value chain they perform best and thus every company forming the network
maximizes its own added values (Poulin, Montreuil, Gauvin, 1994). This
synergetic approach is considered as collaborative relationship based
view (CRBV). This perspective of analysis suggests that critical
resources can be expanded or built up beyond the confines of the firm
and be integrated into inter-firm routines and processes. The use of
outsourcing must be considered as a strategy in which essential process
activities could be outsourced in a framework of long-term cooperation
where the suppliers are considered to be partners (Pfohl and Buse,
2000). The greater the competitive advantage that is associated with an
activity, the higher that activity's strategic relational value
will be. Strategic relational value is generated by the development of
capabilities across organizational boundaries and can be achieved by the
creation of complementary resources, defined as "distinctive
resources of alliance partners" that jointly generate rents higher
than the sum of those generated independently by the resources of each
organization (Dyer and Singh, 1998). The development of relational
capabilities with customers and suppliers through process integration
(Hammer, 2001), relational competitiveness and simplification of
activities (Hammer and Champy, 1994; Davenport, 1996) can all be
influential when process activities are outsourced. Thus, the
relationship based theory expands the capacity of firms even if it does
not have all the resources and competences. It also encourages firms to
build cooperation in core competence fields. Relationship based theory
differs from resource based view (RBV) whereby core competences should
be kept inside the firm and thus should deprive other firms from
enjoying the benefit from cooperative inter-organizational
relationships.
Recent research in offshore outsourcing has been diverting its
focus from the Transaction cost economics (TCE), Resource based view
(RBV) and Resource dependence view (RDV) towards Knowledge based view
(KBV) and collaborative relationship based view (CRBV). Collaborative
Relationship based view (CRBV) develops and explains how firms gain and
sustain a competitive advantage within inter-organizational
relationships (McIvor, 2005). More and more authors are combining the
KBV, CRBV and dynamic network theories in order to explain the virtue of
collaboration among the firms and one of this forms is outsourcing. This
evolution of theoretical development is required in an era of changing
paradigm of offshore outsourcing argument which seems to be transforming
from pure 'cost savings from labor arbitrage' to that of
'value creation through leveraging of resources'--a more
sustainable proposition where clients and vendors are likely to get into
a strategic and long term relationship. This stream of research can also
be related to the notion of 'transformational outsourcing'
which does not directly and primarily aim at cost savings or acquiring
resources that are unavailable internally. The transformational
outsourcing is adopted to achieve the structures and form of a virtual
firm. The search for these flexible and dynamic structures have given
rise to organizational forms such as the virtual organizations, network
organizations, modular organizations, barrier less organizations etc.
(Hatonen and Eriksson, 2009, Montreuil, Vallerand and Poulin, 1996). The
competitive advantage of a company is largely determined by the
competitive advantage of the network the company belongs to, (Lakhal,
Martel, Oral and Montreuil, 1999). In consequence of this changing
paradigm of offshore outsourcing, theoretical foundation of research in
this field is also changing from purely Transaction cost economics (TCE)
and Resource based view (RBV) towards knowledge based view (KBV) and
social exchange theories such as collaborative relationship based view
(CRBV).
The emerging theoretical framework of offshore outsourcing can be
put in the following graph:
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
Emerging Research Questions and Topics on Offshore Outsourcing
The extensive literature review led us to assume that the basic
questions in offshore outsourcing such as What, Where and how will
remain key topics for outsourcing research in the future:
Firstly, firms are increasingly trading off their options on what
to outsource and to what extent. The increasing variety of suppliers has
created an outsourcing market in which almost any business process or
activity can be sourced.
Secondly, globalization, development in NTIC and other
communication and logistics development and rapid economic development
of many emerging countries has added versatility to the outsourcing
location decisions. For example, Eastern Europe is replacing in certain
sectors the offshore outsourcing activities which were supposed to
migrate to India or China.
Thirdly, with respect to the "how" question, firms are
continuously developing new outsourcing models to maximize the value
while minimizing the risks of using external sources. The outsourcing
management decision has, thus, gone beyond make-or-buy.
Fourthly, more and more offshore outsourcing projects are coming
under rigorous scrutiny and value creation out of these manoeuvres.
The management of outsourcing relations has become a key managerial
interest. The costs of managing the relationship portfolio also
increases as the distinct number of vendors increase, because the
managerial task of managing and aligning the portfolio becomes more
complicated. The relationship management issue of the suppliers is
increasingly becoming the only sustainable competitive edge (Doig et
al., 2001). From the theoretical perspective this issue can be addressed
with the use of portfolio management theory into future outsourcing
research. Prominent researchers such as Markowitz (1952) introduced
portfolio management in the early 1950s for the purposes of financial
management. It has not yet been widely picked up by outsourcing
researchers.
Emerging Contexts of Offshore Outsourcing Research
The context of the offshore outsourcing has been changed lately.
The ever increasing global supplier base have made it possible for firms
of all sizes larges as well as the SMEs to capitalize on the benefits of
outsourcing. There is very few existing research on small and
medium-sized firm's (SMEs) offshore outsourcing activities. In
contrast to large firms, SMEs face different kinds of challenges in
outsourcing management. This is emerging as an important research field
in offshore outsourcing research.
Offshore outsourcing in foreign countries increases risks not only
from financial point of view but also the political one. Therefore, the
analysis of possible risks is an essential part of studying offshore
outsourcing (Jahns et al., 2006; Pai and Basu, 2007). In addition to the
financial risks, the risk of intellectual property (IP) loss must be
taken into consideration since many countries have not developed a
strong IP regime. The role of the local governments (in both the home
and the target country) as well as the role of international
organizations and treaties can be very important field to investigate
for offshore outsourcing (Mankiw and Swagel, 2006).
The decision of the location for the offshore outsourcing
destination, time differences between the outsourcing firms and
contracting firms as well as the time for outsourcing in a particular
market are vital questions to investigate. Par example,
'Destination China' could be great for the moment but it can
lose its advantages in certain sectors and the outsourcing firms which
intend to offshore should decide precisely where and when to relocate
their activities in a given industry. This leads to one further research
question regarding outsourcing that probably will rise in the
future-"when".
Small and Medium Size Enterprises (SMEs) and Offshore Outsourcing
The research in offshore outsourcing holds that large multinational
companies (MNCs) outsource part of their business processes
internationally as a means of reducing costs and achieving greater
efficiency, flexibility and access to tangible as well as intangible
resources (Doh, 2005, Farrell, 2005, Ramamurti (2004). Most of the
researchers, policy makers and practitioners focus their attentions on
the MNCs offshore outsourcing (Levy, 2005, Lewin, Peacock, Peeters,
Russell, & Sutton, 2005). On the other hand, the offshore
outsourcing of the SMEs has received far less attention from the
academic, policy makers and managers. Few researchers such as Scully and
Fawcett (1994) studied the offshore outsourcing of the SMEs and
concluded that the motivations, challenges, and performance outcomes
associated with the offshore outsourcing of the SMEs may differ from
those of the MNCs in several respects. Researchers typically consider
the SMEs to serve local market with locally available resources.
However, Scholars from the entrepreneurship and international business
research streams acknowledge that small and medium (SMEs) firms also
play important roles in international business (Fujita, 1995 a,b, Oviatt
& McDougall, 1994, Reynolfs, 1997). This stream of research is
focused on the internationalization of the SMEs to reap the
entrepreneurial opportunities in international product markets. The
other value chain activities such as offshore outsourcing of these firms
are lacking in academic research. The existing research from the
different research streams such as Economics (Gorg & Hanley, 2005,
Grossman & Helpman, 2005, Grossman, Helpman & Szeidl, 2005),
International Business(IB) (Parkhe, 2007), strategic management (Butler,
2001, Hoskisson et al., 1999, Morstead and Blount, 2003, Porter, 1980)
and Supply chain management (Jahns, Hartmann, Bals, 2006) are mostly
theoretical (Bunyaratavej, Hahn,& Doh, 2007, Kedia & Lahiri,
2007). There are very few empirical researches with limited findings and
sometimes different findings from conventional wisdom and theory. For
example, early researchers have found that offshore outsourcing will
take place in low cost countries (LCC) (Grote & Taube, 2007). But
the study of Bunyaratavej, Hahn & Doh (2007) found that "a
country is more likely to be a destination of higher value offshore
outsourcing as the average wage of the country increases. Research
exploring why SME managers decide to outsource various business
processes to foreign firms is practically non-existent (Gregorio,
Musteen and Thomas, 2008). In practice, Small and medium size enterprise
(SMEs) dominates the business world in Canada and Quebec with 96% of all
type of (for profit) enterprises, 35% of export value and employ half of
the work force in the province (statistics Canada, 2007). The importance
of the SMEs in Canadian and Quebecker economy and society is enormous.
That's why it is very important to explore the venue of offshore
outsourcing of Canadian and Quebeckers SMEs and specially the impact of
this strategy on competitiveness in international markets. Outsourcing
of non-core activities could allow them to focus on the activities they
are best at, which in turn improves competitiveness. SMEs become more
efficient as a result of the information flow that helps them improve
technology and learn from the experience of other partnering (suppliers)
firms and develop network in order to reap the synergetic or
complementary benefits of partnerships. The efficiency and flexibility
enhancing benefits of offshore outsourcing can allow the SMEs operating
under resource constraints to tap into valuable resources from the
suppliers firms in the emerging country. This can help them to gain
competitive advantages. SMEs are very often size and resource
constraints that inhibit their ability to internalize international
activities (Dunning 1980). Offshore outsourcing can allow them to
overcome size disadvantages and resource constraints and tapping
resources owned by others (McGrath & MacMillan, 2000). In fact,
through offshore outsourcing, SMEs can obtain the benefits of
foreign-location-specific advantages such as access to world class
capabilities and innovation without needing to build internal
multinational operations. This allows the SMEs to gain both cost savings
and access to innovative capabilities. SMEs can be even more motivated
to enter into offshore outsourcing activities comparing with the MNCs.
Diminishing transportation and communication costs enable SMEs to
explore outsourcing opportunities internationally. In the past, such
international opportunities may have been beyond their reach and only
within the reach of larger MNCs. Integrating the literature on offshore
outsourcing (Gorg, Aoife, & Strobl, 2004) with that of 'role of
networks and learning' in the internationalization process (Chetty
& Agndal, 2007, Johanson & Vahne, 2003, 2006) is needed in order
to study the phenomena of the offshore outsourcing of the SME. It
appears from this literature that offshore outsourcing is an important
mechanism for improving international competitiveness (Gregorio, Musteen
& Thomas, 2008).
New Streams of Offshore Outsourcing Research
The offshore outsourcing phenomenon needs to be examined from
multidimensional such as economic, strategic and social point of view.
More research should focus on the impact of offshore outsourcing on the
firm's ability to compete and succeed in the globalized economy.
The offshore outsourcing is a highly debated issue and very often
accused of all sort of socioeconomic deterioration in the developed
countries without any firm level data. That's why it's very
important to study the performance of those firms which have entered
into offshore outsourcing activities. The investigation on macro-level
is also needed and specifically can address the questions of job losses
and job creation in total and find the real differences. Since the 1980s
offshore outsourcing as a corporate strategy has evolved from the
transactional approach to a more broader form in which the outsourced
process is co-developed with the outsourcing provider, and in which cost
is no more the principal objective to attain. Since 90s, Academic
interest is increasing in offshore outsourcing research field (Jiang
& Qureshi, 2006).
The basic questions in offshore outsourcing research such as what
to outsource, how and where to outsource have been the primary questions
guiding the outsourcing research in the past and continuously remain
pertinent, however, new questions are arising. Among them Institutional
effects, outsourcing timing, incremental outsourcing is prominent
(Hatonen & Eriksson, 2009). Although, many existing management
theories were used individually to explain different facets of the
offshore outsourcing, more and more authors are combining several
theories to explain more integratively the offshore outsourcing
phenomenon. On the top of cost savings, research is promising with
issues such as access to resources and skills or to gaining operational
flexibility. The current research promotes a more cooperative approach
to outsourcing management. In offshore outsourcing research, the
relational view and transaction cost approach do not contradict each
other, but they co-exist.
SYSTEMATIC LITERATURE REVIEW (SLR)
There are two major reasons exist for reviewing the literature
(Sharp & Howard, 1996). The preliminary literature review helps to
generate and refine research ideas. The critical literature review or
systematic literature review will enable us to get the update current
state of knowledge, its limitations and to fit the current research
project in the wider context (Gill & Johnson, 1997). A systematic
review is a summary of research that uses explicit methods to perform a
thorough literature search and critical appraisal of individual studies
to identify the valid and applicable evidence. Our critical review
respected the following criteria:
* Included the key academic theories within the research area of
offshore outsourcing ;
* Demonstrated the up-to-date knowledge of offshore outsourcing
field;
* Shows how the current research relates to previous published
research;
* Asses the strength and weaknesses of previous work, including
omissions or bias
* Justify the arguments of current research by referencing previous
research.
A systematic review is a methodological process which identifies,
evaluates and analyzes research evidence to synthesize and map it
(Kitchenham, 2004; Staples and Niazi, 2007). The systematic review is
based on a process which is a defined and methodical way of identifying,
assessing, and analyzing published primary studies in order to
investigate a specific research question (Staples and Niazi, 2007). It
is based on a rigorous, transparent and reproducible process allowing
developing the most complete view of the literature for researchers and
policymakers (Tranfield et al., 2003; Kitchenham, 2004). Undertaking a
systematic review is increasingly regarded as a fundamental scientific
activity, and the frequency of this kind of review is increasing in
management (Tranfield et al., 2003).
The basic steps of a systematic review include: 1) identifying the
need for a review, 2) developing a research protocol (formulating an
explicit research question, fixing inclusion and exclusion criteria), 3)
identifying relevant studies, 4) selecting the studies according to the
inclusion and exclusion criteria, 5) assessing the quality of retained
studies, 6) summarizing and synthesizing study results (Tranfield et
al., 2003); (Kitchenham, 2004; Staples and Niazi, 2007). Systematic
literature review is widely used in many research fields. The current
research project is not an exception. According to Becheikh et al.,
(2006)" Principal objective of a systematic literature review is to
survey the fundamental contributions in a given research field.
Conducting an exploratory literature review before the systematic
literature review can be beneficial in order to better capture the
terminology and the taxonomy of the field of research such as offshore
outsourcing. Systematic literature review should be based on a specific
objective which will guide the selection process, extraction, filtering
and text analysis (Becheikh et al., 2006). Thus the systematic
literature review became an important research instrument in
Management science research in order to augment research validity
by a rigorous process and to reduce subjective characteristics.
Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
This systematic review sets out to answer the two following
research questions: 1) what are the research gaps in offshore
outsourcing and, 2) what are the emerging research issues on
offshore-outsourcing?
Selection of the Articles
In the papers retrieving phase, we used some popular databases such
as EBHOcast, ABI/informa, FACTIVA, ISI, sciencedirect, FRANCIS etc. with
the key words like offshore outsourcing research, offshoring and
performance research, evolution of research in offshoring, and future of
offshoring outsourcing research etc. Articles were selected if they
addressed one of the two principal questions mentioned earlier. The
current systematic review took in consideration published peer-reviewed
papers, as well as research reports. Books, dissertations and book
reviews were excluded, due to time and resource limitations. Relevant
ideas and significant scientific contributions included in books and
dissertations are often published afterwards in peer-reviewed articles.
At the end of this phase, 2359 documents were identified and
reviewed, according to the inclusion and exclusion criteria. A first
sorting based on the documents' titles and abstracts led to exclude
2169 documents that did not meet the inclusion/exclusion criteria. The
thorough reading of the full text of the remaining 190 documents
concluded with the exclusion of 133 citations. Hence, 57 documents
crossed the double sorting and were definitely included in the first
phase of the systematic review. 81 percent of them came from three
electronic databases which are, in order, ISI web of science, Academic
search premier, and proquest/ABI. Among these 57 articles, 13 articles
were cited more than 50 times and through the manual search of
references of these articles, 8 new articles were chosen. Thus total 65
articles and research reports were analyzed for this current paper.
RESEARCH GAPS AND OPPORTUNITIES
Research on 'Offshore outsourcing' is still disparately
scattered among the different research field such as International
Business (IB), Strategic Management (SM) and Supply chain management
(SCM). The practice of borrowing theories from multiple fields of social
sciences is very much present in the research community and it remains
widely disparate the different subfields of research in offshore
outsourcing. Some of the issues such as job losses, intellectual
property losses, decision making process and contracts were adequately
addressed by the researchers. While some other phases like the
outsourcing partner search, collaborative relationships in organizing
offshore outsourcing i.e implementation, critical evaluation of the
outsourcing projects, soft issues like customer satisfaction, faster
product cycle and decision to review or terminate have not been
researched in detail. In this section, we identified specific research
gaps and opportunities for future research in each phase.
Outsourcing Decision Making Process
A vast majority of research articles have focused on the
outsourcing decision by presenting various explanations of why
organizations choose to outsource part of their activities. Most view
the outsourcing decision as a rational decision based on economic or
resource-based factors. Goo et al. (2000) identified 14 theory-based
drivers of outsourcing decision. However, most of the studies focused
primarily on economic drivers. It is commonly assumed that an outside
specialized firm can provide the same level of service at a lower cost
than if the non-core products were made internally while the firm can
focus on its core competencies. However, there is no study that has
empirically investigated this important issue as a whole. Also, most
research studies have focused on rational decision making based on
transaction cost and resource-based theories. Alternative decision
models based on institutional and political theories as well as
interfirm synergetic benefits and learning and innovation have been
largely ignored. With the current rush to outsourcing, there seems to be
a bandwagon effect in outsourcing decision making (Lacity &
Hirchheim, 1993). There is clearly a need for more research
investigating the underlying process leading to outsourcing decisions.
Most studies have not distinguished the differences between the
decision-making processes at small & medium sizes (SMEs) and large
organizations. There is a need to investigate how the processes and
decision drivers differ at organizations with different sizes and scales
of resources. Furthermore, offshore outsourcing is on the rise. The
decision process in offshore outsourcing may differ significantly from
that in onshore outsourcing. There is a need to study those differences
in processes as well as offshore outsourcing decision criteria and
drivers.
Offshore Outsourcing Partner Search and Selection
After deciding to outsource, the firm goes to the next step of
selecting the most suitable outsourcing service provider who can offer
the products and services at the appropriate cost. There are very few
studies were done on this issue. Authors like Michell & Fitzgerald,
(1997) focused exclusively on outsourcing provider firm selection and
search. Few others touched on the idea of partner firm selection in a
broader context of the overall outsourcing process or contract
negotiation and/or partnership formation (Barthelemy, 2003; Lacity &
Willcocks, 1998; Lee & Kim, 1999). Often partner firms are selected
based on perceived complementaries between the organization's
capabilities and partner firm's capabilities (Levina & Ross,
2003).
There is a need to develop matrices for finding and matching the
gaps in internal firm resources and partner firm's resources for
objective partner firm selection.
Outsourcing Contracting Process
A relatively large body of literature has focused on the
outsourcing contract between the client organization and provider firm
with the theoretical bases of social contract theory and social exchange
theory. The outsourcing contract specifies in detail the exchanges of
services and/or products, financial matters, assets and/or staff
transfers, communication and information exchanges, service enforcements
and monitoring methods, key personnel, dispute resolution procedures and
other formal issues (Halvey & Murphy, 1996; Willkocks & Kern,
1998, cited in the 'Virginia Ilie and Mihir Parikh AMCIS 2004
Proceedings).
Most researchers have looked at the outsourcing contract as the
mechanism to develop a balance of power between the client organization
and partner firms. There is a need to evaluate the balance between the
rigor and flexibility in contracts. Rigor can reduce the threat of
opportunism by a partner firm (Lacity & Hirschheim, 1993), but it
can develop an arm's length relationship with the partner firm.
There is a need to investigate the impact of outsourcing contract
complexity on outsourcing relationship and success.
Furthermore, contract governance structure may have impact on
successful negotiation and development of contract and on the quality of
future partnership. It has been pointed out that a well-developed
contract greatly influences the resulting quality of the relationship
(Lacity & Hirschheim, 1993). However, no study empirically
investigated this proposition. Contracts may also play a significant
role in reducing technical and business uncertainties by transferring
them from the client organization to the partner firm and vice versa.
There is a need for additional studies that focus on contract governance
structure and the role of contract in reducing these types of
uncertainties.
Questions Related to Implementation of Offshore Outsourcing
Projects
The actual implementation phase in the overall outsourcing process
has not received much attention in the research. There is a clear need
for empirical studies that investigate the conditions that assure or
inhibit a smooth implementation, the process of knowledge and assets
transfer to partner firm/s and the cost and potential pitfalls in
implementation process. Implementing an outsourcing agreement is often a
complex process requiring effective management. Future research should
focus on studying the effectiveness of project management concepts and
practices in successful outsourcing implementation.
Strategy on Operations and Relationship
A vast majority of studies have investigated the relationship in an
outsourcing arrangement. In fact, the relationship between the client
organization and the partner firm is the second most researched topic in
the overall outsourcing process, in the literature, after the initial
decision to outsource. The outsourcing relationship has been studied
mostly in an interorganizational relationship framework using
resource-dependence, transaction cost and agency theory, from an
economic standpoint and social exchange theory and power-political
theory. Previous research has classified the outsourcing relationship
between organizations in two types (Lee & Kim, 1999): transactional
style and partnership style. A transactional style relationship (Lacity
& Hirschheim, 1993; Fitzgerald & Willcocks, 1994; Grover et al.,
1996) develops through the formal contract in which rules of the game
are well specified and the failure to deliver on commitments by either
party should be resolved through litigation or penalty clauses in the
contract. This approach can be traced down to the supplier-customer type
of relationship. A partnership approach (Lee & Kim, 1999; Saunders
et al., 1997) includes risk and benefits sharing, the need to view the
relationship as a series of exchanges without a definite endpoint based
on trust and mutual understanding. This approach tends to view the
relationship as an ongoing alliance. However, other authors (Lacity
& Hirschheim, 1993) have posited that outsourcing providers cannot
be strategic partners because they do not share the same profit motive.
In order to resolve such differences, future studies can investigate the
mechanisms that promote and factors that inhibit the evolution from an
arm's length relationship to strategic partnership over time.
Critical Performance Evaluation of Offshore Outsourcing
Evaluation is the phase where the outcome of the outsourcing
decision is measured against contract clauses such as the service level
or performance goals (Lee & Kim, 1999). Performance has been found
in the literature to be a major factor when it comes to the evaluation
of outsourcing projects. It is common to measure the outcome in terms of
service satisfaction, system satisfaction, user satisfaction, service
quality, cost-reduction, financial, or technical performance (Lee &
Kim, 1999).
However, our analysis uncovered that there is no common instrument
for evaluating the outcome of outsourcing. Objective and perceptive
measures on different dimensions (such as project quality, partner firm
performance, productivity, financial issues, effectiveness, and
technical, data security, and employee morale) need to be developed and
tested. There is also a need for a comprehensive, framework that
integrates various performance measures in outsourcing. Having such a
framework can also help develop more effective and detailed contracts.
Decision to Renew or Terminate the Outsourcing Relationship
t the end of the outsourcing period, a decision needs to be made
whether to extend or terminate the current relationship with the current
partner firm. Lacity & Willcocks (1998) identified three options
available to the client organization: extend the contract with the
current partner firm, switch to a new partner firm or bring the
outsourced work back in house. Studies on the decision at the end of the
outsourcing contract are inexistent in the existing literature on
offshore outsourcing. There is a clear need for a lot of research in
this area. For instance, there is a need to investigate the impact of
client lock-in situations such as asset specificity, and lack of
internal skills on the decision to renew or terminate.
CONCLUSION
Academic interest in outsourcing continues to rise in parallel to
increased interest in practice. Previous researches have focused more on
some phases of the outsourcing process and much less on other. Even
within more researched phases, studies have tended to focus more on one
or few theories and not on many other plausible theories. For example,
in outsourcing decision making, most studies have focused on transaction
costs and resource availability, while not on other factors such as
knowledge and innovation seeking partnerships and coopetition in
offshore outsourcing. Though its widely believed the benefits of
offshore outsourcing at least among the research and academic community
however, few research exist with empirical data on outsourcing success
or failure in offshore outsourcing. The field of firm level critical
performance evaluation with intangible indicators of offshore
outsourcing is extremely necessary in order to propose a sustainable
offshore outsourcing strategy of the Canadian manufacturing SMEs to the
practitioner as well as for the policy makers.
Based on the extensive literature review, it can be concluded that
the offshore outsourcing research have many directions to which the
outsourcing research can be taken in the near future. What seems to be
the broad underlying managerial interest is to receive more insights
about the success factors in outsourcing which is dependent on the
correct management of offshore outsourcing process from A to Z. There
are at least four research questions are emerging prominent are:
* Firstly, the management of versatile outsourcing relationship
portfolios appears to be one of the current and future managerial
challenges.
* Secondly, the appropriate timing of the offshore outsourcing
* Thirdly, The cultural differences management in offshore
outsourcing dealings with ever increasing service providers from
different part of the planet.
* Fourthly, offshore outsourcing of manufacturing SMEs, its
performance measures and strategic management options.
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