Posted tagged ‘SourceRight Solutions’
May 8, 2012
I found my attendance at last week’s HRO Today Forum to be very worthwhile. I presented my newly published research on the “State of the Learning BPO Marketplace,” including the emergence of social learning. While there, I took full advantage of attending many of the other sessions and meeting with several companies including: The Good Jobs, KellyOCG, Pinstripe, Randstad Sourceright, Kenexa, Aon Hewitt, Raytheon Professional Services, NorthgateArinso, Seven Step Recruitment, and Hays. Here are some of the highlights from the forum.
The Good Jobs: The Good Jobs is an online service that allows job seekers and employers an innovative way to find each other. Employers not only advertise job opportunities, but also their employment brand, culture, and corporate values to candidates. Job seekers can identify their life and work style priorities, and target those employers who meet their needs. Matching talent desired to employer desired will lead to employee engagement and retention in addition to business results, including increased productivity and lower cost by reduced attrition. No surprise The Good Jobs won the iTalent competition.
Where do Jobs Come From Panel: This panel was led by Prudential HR SVP Sharon Taylor and included Brink Lindsey from the Kauffman Foundation; Scott Case, CEO of Startup America; and John Haltiwanger from the University of Maryland. A few interesting data points from this session included the following:
- 90% of companies are small, but 65% of employees work for large companies
- 2003 – 2007 saw high job growth averaging 200,000 hires per month but it was not as strong as the 1990s
- From ~1977 – 2003, there were only 5 years that job growth exceeded layoffs for non-start-up companies, i.e. a net creation in jobs
- I missed the time period, but the point was that more jobs have been created in startups (3.5m) vs. established private sector companies (2.5m)
- The fastest growing businesses are also the most profitable.
Is Outsourcing Good for America Debate: Interesting points from the pro side included:
- 90% of outsourcing serves companies outside of the U.S.
- 95% of world consumers are outside of the U.S.
- 90% of what is made abroad gets sold abroad
- Foreign companies invest more in the U.S. (e.g. Honda, Nissan, BMW) than the U.S. invests abroad (it’s a 2 way street)
- The U.S. tax rate is one of the highest in the world adding to why some companies shift a portion of their business and jobs offshore.
Congratulations to all Bakers Dozen MSP winners led by Randstad Sourceright, Staff Management, Allegis Group Services, Adecco Solutions Group, The Bartech Group, Guidant Group, Advantage xPO, KellyOCG, Hyphen, Agile 1, Yoh, Hays Plc, and WorkforceLogic.
Congratulations to HRO Award recipients including providers NorthgateArinso, Pinstripe, Aon Hewitt, KellyOCG, and Evolv, Inc.; provider executives Cynthia Crose of IBM and Mike Ettling of NorthgateArinso; and buyer executive Chris Payton of Bank of America.
Gary Bragar, HRO Research Director, NelsonHall
Interested in reading the latest HRO news from NelsonHall? Subscribe to our newsletter by emailing amy.gurchensky@nelson-hall.com with “HRO Insight” as the subject.
Categories: HR BPO, hr outsourcing, hro, HRO Today Forum
Tags: Adecco Solutions Group, Advantage xPO, Agile 1, Allegis Group Services, Aon Hewitt, Guidant Group, Hays, Hyphen, IBM, KellyOCG, Kenexa, learning outsourcing, NorthgateArinso, Pinstripe, Randstad, Randstad Sourceright, Raytheon Professional Services, Seven Step Recruitment, Social Learning, SourceRight Solutions, Staff Management, The Bartech Group, The Good Jobs, WorkforceLogic, Yoh
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October 6, 2011
Kudos to Bill Kutik and everyone involved in planning and organizing the 14th Annual HR Tech Conference that took place October 3 -5. Surveys are still being collected, but I’d rate it as a success! As an analyst, I did attend a couple presentations and briefly visited the showroom floor but, the majority of my time was spent in small meetings learning about new outsourcing contract activity and technology offerings, which included demos. Highlights from some meetings included:
- IBM, already a major global MPHRO and LBPO provider, winning three significant contracts in the past month with clients headquartered in three different continents including a MPHRO contract with Air Canada (press release issued this morning). More to follow on the Air Canada win as well as the other MPHRO and LBPO contract awards as those press releases are issued.
- ManpowerGroup Solutions’ RPO business continuing to grow at > 50% thus far in 2011 with dozens of new clients added YTD in countries that include: U.S., Mexico, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Australia, China, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Taiwan, India, Vietnam, Japan, U.K., Israel, Belgium, Finland, Poland, Netherlands, Sweden, and France.
- ADP’s demo of Vantage HCM, which is initially targeted in the U.S. for organizations with 1,000 – 20,000 employees. I was impressed with the performance management capabilities and the overall ease of use, which included setting goals, identifying competencies, weighing performance to goals, linking performance to compensation, succession planning, etc. I could easily see how this platform can make an organization’s talent more effective, especially when combined with project management and implementation consultation.
- Kenexa’s recent announcements that include: launching Social Solutions for Recruiting and its new performance management suite, 2x Perform, which integrates performance management, succession planning, and compensation; a partnership with Skillsoft to integrate its e-learning content and SkillPort platform with Kenexa’s talent management platform and 2x Perform; a partnership with The Brooklyn Group to increase RPO presence in Australia; and a partnership with HR GlobBlog for global talent advice.
- SourceRight Solutions, whose revenue has been growing from both new contract wins as well as existing clients increasing hiring volumes, with the biggest news that Randstad completed its acquisition of the SFN Group for ~$771m last month. SourceRight will be the RPO arm for Randstad and with combined company revenue of ~$22 bn, of which ~80% are in Europe, expect great opportunities abroad as well as continued success in North America.
- Mercer’s Human Capital Connect, which combines talent management technology for performance management, succession planning, and compensation. It uses the PeopleFluent platform and a client success team that does a readiness assessment and stays with the client for life. Since its launch in mid-2010, a few major clients have been won, but names cannot be disclosed.
I attended twelve other meetings, demos, and presentations I’ll write more about in a future blog, but for now common themes are that HRO is thriving and that vendors are introducing new offerings for clients to improve talent management. Yes, technology combined with consultation is important and is most effective by organizations trained in how to do performance management.
Gary Bragar, HR Outsourcing Research Director, NelsonHall
Interested in reading the latest HRO news from NelsonHall? Subscribe to our newsletter by emailing amy.gurchensky@nelson-hall.com with “HRO Insight” as the subject.
Categories: HR Tech, HR Tech Conference, HR Technology, HRO Activity, HRO contracts, HRO provider partnerships
Tags: ADP, Air Canada, Bill Kutik, compensation management, e-learning, HR GlobBlog, Human Capital Connect, IBM, Kenexa, Kenexa 2X Perform, lbpo, learning outsourcing, Manpower, Mercer, multi-process hro, PeopleFluent, performance management, Randstad, recruitment process outsourcing, rpo, SFN Group, SkillPort platform, SkillSoft, Social Solutions for Recruiting, SourceRight Solutions, succession planning, talent management, The Brooklyn Group, Vantage HCM
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July 29, 2011
A pretty big acquisition happened last week in the staffing and recruiting industry. Here is the backdrop.
On July 20, 2011, Randstad announced that it is going to acquire SFN Group to expand in North America. Randstad is headquartered in the Netherlands and SFN Group in the United States. It is a cash tender offer at $14 per share. Approved by both boards, the acquisition, now subject to regulatory approvals and a tender offer of at least 50% of SFN Group’s outstanding shares, equates to ~$771m. This is a premium of 53% over SFN Group’s closing share on July 19, 2011. The acquisition is expected to close in September 2011.
The Randstad Group will have combined revenues of ~$22bn / €17bn (pro forma as of March 31, 2011). In North America, the combined company will have $4.6bn in revenues (pro forma as of March 31, 2011) from the following service segments:
- 52% Staffing
- 39% Professionals
- 9% HR Services including payroll, managed services, and RPO.
Randstad, who already has sizeable revenue in North America, now becomes a major force. Randstad, which had full year 2010 revenues of €14,179m, obtained 13% of its revenues (or €1,848m) from North America, which equates to over $2.6Bn. The SFN Group had full full year revenues of $2,053m. Approximately 80% of Randstad’s 2010 revenues were in Europe.
So, is Randstad trying to conquer the staffing world via acquisitions? Its last acquisition was in August 2010, acquiring FujiStaff Holdings to strengthen its presence in the Japanese staffing market. Since 2006, Randstad has merged and partnered with five other companies in Japan to provide staffing services that include temporary and permanent hires, contract staffing, and internal recruiting for industries that include healthcare, real estate, and construction. Since 2005, Randstad has been acquisitive elsewhere in growing its staffing business including in:
- U.K.
- Germany (3)
- Netherlands
- China
- Switzerland.
Randstad now also picks up SourceRight Solutions’ RPO business, which NelsonHall estimated as the third largest RPO provider in North America in its 2011 RPO market analysis report. SourceRight’s RPO business has had significant year-over year revenue growth in H1 2011. Its RPO business has primarily been in North America, but expect for it to expand into Europe by 2012. More to follow in a future blog…
Gary Bragar, HR Outsourcing Research Director, NelsonHall
Categories: Acquisitions, hr outsourcing, hr outsourcing research, hro, HRO Staffing, nelsonhall, recruitment process outsourcing, RPO providers
Tags: FujiStaff, HR, hr outsourcing, hro, hro acquisitions, hro research, Japan, nelsonhall, Netherlands, Randstad, recruitment process outsourcing, rpo, SFN Group, SourceRight Solutions, staffing, United States
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May 9, 2011
As bullish as I’ve been on RPO, results reported to date for staffing and RPO providers have exceeded even my expectations. As we all know, 2009 was a down year for hiring, but then there was a big turnaround in 2010 and in RPO, most vendors I interviewed for my recently published RPO report said that revenue and hiring are back to pre-recession levels. Although hiring has picked up in the U.S., I don’t think any of us would say it is going gang-busters yet. But in comparison to overall staffing results for Q1 2010 that averaged ~12% revenue growth, Q1 2011 has about doubled thus far. Let’s take a look at some Q1 2011 results to date and how they compare year-over-year to Q1 2010:
- Manpower up 24%
- Hays up 18%
- SeatonCorp up 25% and its RPO business PeopleScout is up 103%
- CTG up 22%
- SFN up 6% and its RPO business in SourceRight Solutions is up 83%
- Randstad up 22%
- Kenexa up 59% and its RPO business is up 56%.
I do believe that the rest of the year will be strong for staffing, but it’s hard to believe that RPO will maintain quite the same momentum. That said, hiring will improve and I agree completely with Manpower’s findings on May 6th stating that U.S. companies must hire again as workers are stretched to the max doing more with less. In my view, it’s been this way long before the recession, mostly in part to how Wall Street rewards companies for their performance, but we’ve reached a tipping point and I’m almost certain this is not just a U.S. phenomenon.
But instead of just reading about it, come join us at the HRO Forum in Las Vegas May 24 – 25 that combines the HRO, RPO, and MSP Summits along with the HR Demo Show.
As a speaker, I’ve been extended an offer to invite buy-side HR execs with a 60% discount and also an offer for a limited number of RPO buy-side practitioners to be able to attend all four Summits for free, get reimbursed for travel up to $500, and get 2 hotel nights for free. If you are interested, then send me an email at gary.bragar@nelson-hall.com and I’ll send you the info/codes to register.
Gary Bragar, Lead HRO Analyst, NelsonHall
Categories: financial results, Hiring, hr outsourcing, hro, HRO providers, nelsonhall, recruitment process outsourcing, rpo, Staffing
Tags: CTG, financial results, Hays, HR, hr outsourcing, hro, HRO Forum, HRO providers, hro research, HRO Summit, Kenexa, Manpower, PeopleScout, Randstad, recruitment process outsourcing, rpo, SeatonCorp, SFN, SourceRight Solutions, staffing
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April 29, 2011
Everything seems pretty moderate and modest in the garden of HRO so far this year. After the abundance in 2010, perhaps that is not so bad. Reasonably steady business gives service providers a breather and a chance to attend to growth opportunities by leveraging current capacities while cultivating new capabilities selectively.
In benefits outsourcing, the contract levels were good with some key wins and renewals. Fidelity continues its blossoming growth with major 5 year renewals for total retirement outsourcing contracts with HP and BP, and a new defined contributions contract with the University of Oklahoma. In the U.K., Mercer was awarded a 7 year defined benefits renewal by Saint-Gobain and it won a new pensions administration client, Loomis UK.
RPO saw a smaller crop of new awards, but is still growing, especially in North America and the U.K. My colleague, Gary Bragar, will be heading off soon to the RPO Summit as a presenter and I look forward to hearing the latest views.
Smaller M&A and partnership activity remains perennial, continuing the pattern of growing footprints in terms of geography and specialized services. GP was the most active with the acquisitions of Ultra Training in the U.K.; RWD Technologies with offices in the U.S., U.K., and Colombia; and Communications Consulting in China. Manpower Group acquired Web Development Company in India to add to its IT recruiting in Asia Pacific. Finally, Raytheon Professional Services partnered with Baptist Health to increase training in healthcare systems.
With the blooming of HRO platform managed services, we have two trends. First is the belief that the time for HRO mid-market is finally here. Vendors are confident enough to invest in and launch new platform service offerings specifically for the mid-market. The second is growth into new fields beyond the base of payroll and HR administration systems. Examples of both trends:
- Payroll – NorthgateArinso launched agoHRa for companies with up to 500 ee’s per country
- Learning – IBM launched the mid-market Smart Business Learning Services and has launched Smart Business Learning Content Services
- RPO – Mid-market grew from c. 20% of total revenue in 2008 to c. 33% in 2010
- RPO – SourceRight Solutions launched RPO One for organizations with 100 – 5,000 employees, providing a dedicated service team, pre-configured ATS, and reporting and analytics.
Contract activity adds evidence that customers agree these services are desirable options. NorthgateArinso was awarded a 5 year managed payroll services and HR software contract by Historic Scotland utilizing ResourceLink Aurora. Historic Scotland is responsible for data entry, while NorthgateArinso will handle processing, pay runs, and produce electronic payslips. Edvantage Group won a 3 year managed learning services contract with Rieber & Son in Norway, which included Learning Gateway, Edvantage Group’s SaaS LMS, and e-learning courses. Edvantage Group also recently announced two contacts for its SaaS LMS.
Learning has been slower to recover. Hopefully, 2011 will be the year for its bountiful harvest.
Linda Merritt, Research Director, HRO, NelsonHall
Categories: benefits administration outsourcing, hr outsourcing, hr outsourcing research, hro, mid-market HRO, nelsonhall, payroll outsourcing, recruitment process outsourcing, rpo, RPO Summit, Total Retirement Outsourcing
Tags: agoHRa, benefits administration outsourcing, defined contribution, Edvantage Group, Fidelity, GP, IBM, learning outsourcing, Manpower, Mercer, NorthgateArinso, payroll outsourcing, platform managed services, platform service offerings, Raytheon, ResourceLink Aurora, rpo, RPO One, RPO Summit, RWD Technologies, SaaS, Smart Business Learning Content Services, Smart Business Learning Services, SourceRight Solutions
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April 14, 2011
In early November, my colleague Linda Merritt wrote a blog titled “Mobile Apps Are Ringing Up HRO.” It recognized ADP as one of the early entrants with its payroll app “RUN Powered by ADP” for small business owners, which was launched in October 2010 for the iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch with plans to release Android and RIM-compatible versions this year. Well, it’s hard to believe it has been this long for those of us considered middle-aged, but 40 years ago, Pete Townshend of the rock band The Who wrote “Going Mobile.” The song was about taking a vacation by riding around in a car with no particular destination, something Pete liked to do. I don’t think Pete was thinking about processing payroll while riding around in his car, but this week ADP issued a press release with some very impressive statistics noting that there are already 100,000 users for its RUN payroll app.
A comment by one user, Scott McKain, stated “with just a few clicks, we process payroll conveniently and securely… and since transitioning to the RUN Powered by ADP mobile platform, we can now process payroll securely over a mobile device, no matter where our busy schedules take us.” Hopefully, Scott is not processing payroll while driving around in his car on vacation.
The article also references a 2010 nationwide survey conducted by ADP Research Institute that found that small businesses are leading the trend toward increased mobility, with 90% of small business executives out of the office an average of 23% of the time per 40-hour work week.
Since ADP released its app, other providers have announced mobile offerings for HR services as well, which include:
- Raet’s iPhone and iPad app for gross and net payment calculations and accessing jobs and news from Raet (March 2011)
- Manpower’s mobile recruitment app for candidates and recruiters (February 2011)
- Wipro and McGraw-Hill’s partnership to develop “mConnect,” an open-standard mobile learning (m-learning) platform targeted at low-income, rural, and otherwise underserved students and workers in emerging markets (January 2011)
- Buck Consultants’ (subsidiary of ACS, a Xerox Company) two iPhone apps for health and insurance information: Benefits Genie Lite and Benefits Genie, which give individuals the ability to set future appointment reminders and track health and insurance information (November 2010).
Other providers to launch mobile apps include SourceRight Solutions, Kenexa, and The RightThing.
Out of the necessity to provide payroll services, I think we will continue to see increased mobile payroll for processing payslips, viewing payslips, and performing other associated functions such as direct deposit. In general, mobile offerings for other HR service lines including benefits, recruitment, and learning will be more gradual to take off because they are not as time-sensitive as payroll. I believe that mobile recruitment will take off but initially more so for hiring managers to approve job requisitions when out of the office and candidates to check on status of jobs they are submitting for. M-learning will initially be for more self-paced learning to access content and as I stated last fall in my blog I do believe benefits mobile apps will be important for accessing benefits information, including doctors and other medical care providers for such instances when you are on vaction and an emergency arises or as Pete Townshend would say for when you are Going Mobile.
Gary Bragar, Lead HRO Analyst, NelsonHall
Categories: hr outsourcing, hro, M-learning, Mobile Apps, mobile recruiting, Mobility, Mobility Outsourcing, nelsonhall, payroll outsourcing
Tags: ADP, Android, Apple App Store, benefits, BucK Consulting, HR, HR mobile apps, HR mobile apps providers, hr outsourcing, hro, HRO providers, Kenexa, M-learning, Manpower, McGraw-Hill and Wipro, mConnect, mobility, nelsonhall, payroll, payroll processing, Raet, recruitment, RIM, RUN mobile payroll, small business HRO, SourceRight Solutions, The RightThing, Wipro
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February 25, 2011
HR BPO has historically been targeted to and bought by large organizations. However, the mid-market, defined by NelsonHall as 500 – 15,000 employees, is rapidly gaining traction. How so? In NelsonHall’s Targeting RPO Market Analysis, that was published this week, mid-market RPO grew from c. 1/5 of total revenue in 2008 to c. 1/3 in 2010. The rapid growth is the result of mid-market clients looking to take advantage of the following benefits:
- Reducing the costs of HR services
- Improving service delivery, including standardization of technology and consistency of process across lines of business and geography
- Gaining access to better technology that clients may not be able to invest in themselves
- Taking advantage of expertise and knowledge of best practices.
In fact, many HRO providers have introduced solutions or made acquisitions specifically for the mid-market. In RPO, SourceRight Solutions launched RPO One for the small to medium-sized (SMB) market in December 2010. Targeted at organizations with 100 – 5,000 employees, RPO One provides clients with a dedicated account manager and team focused on the SMB market. It also has a pre-configured Peopleclick ATS (applicant tracking system) bundled with SourceRight’s reporting and analytics platform and Avature’s customer relationship management (CRM) system that includes social recruiting.
In payroll, NorthgateArinso recently launched agoHRa, a payroll solution for companies with up to 500 employees per country. agoHRa can be used as a standalone local payroll solution or as part of a multi-country solution. It can also be linked into NorthgateArinso’s euHReka platform.
In benefits, Aon Hewitt’s acquisition of RealLife HR was an early example of a provider expanding its services, particularly health and welfare benefits administration, to employers with fewer than 15,000 employees and/or retirees. Mercer rolled out its Enterprise Momentum service to help mid-market employers gain an advantage navigating the insurance broker market. In addition, Mercer acquired Innovative Process Administration in 2010 for its recordkeeping and enrollment technology as part of its growth plan in the health and benefits mid-market outsourcing space.
In learning, IBM is targeting the mid-market with a new offering, Smart Business Learning Services, a cloud-based solution with quick implementation and variable pricing. Although it’s geared toward the mid-market, it offers all the services and functionality of an LMS for the large market. IBM has also recently launched Smart Business Learning Content Services for the mid-market, which is delivered on the cloud as well and priced on a per user basis.
NelsonHall continues to see and capture mid-market HRO contract wins in our tracking service, providing evidence of success with this market. Consequently, expect HRO providers to continue to launch offerings with cloud-age technology, services, and cost points that will finally bring mid-market HRO into the big time.
Gary Bragar, Lead HRO Analyst, NelsonHall
Categories: benefits administration, benefits administration outsourcing, hr outsourcing, hro, hro research, learning outsourcing, nelsonhall, payroll outsourcing, recruitment process outsourcing
Tags: Aon Hewitt, HR, hr outsourcing, hr outsourcing research, hro, HRO providers, IBM, Mercer, mid-market HRO, NorthgateArinso, Peopleclick, rpo, rpo. hr outsourcing, SourceRight Solutions
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January 21, 2011
Spherion recently released its new customer service survey results conducted by Monster. Results show that nearly three quarters of consumers make a purchasing decision based on customer service, second only to quality and price. That’s huge! As a former quality trainer and college adjunct, I’ve been studying customer service for quite some time. According to prior research by TARP, Technical Assistance Research Program, the figure was close to two-thirds, which indicates that the demand for better customer service has gotten even stronger.
Consumers are fed up with the lack of good customer service and thanks to more service provider competition, buyers don’t have to put up with bad service. Consumers can simply go elsewhere. Granted when it comes to HRO, the switch is not as easy, since it cannot be done by each individual client employee, but collectively, they can make their voices heard through internal communications that the provider may not be aware of immediately (which is why SLA’s alone don’t always tell the whole story). Here are just a few things HRO service providers should do to keep clients happy at the individual participant level; otherwise this would be a white paper, not a blog!
- Ensure polite, courteous, and responsive service representatives in everything you do, e.g. Are you as responsive with a tier 2 inquiry or problem that needs the help of an SME as you are tier 1?
- Be easily accessible, e.g. when providing an 800 number for clients for particular service questions, if there are several prompts that must be selected, why not include the prompts to select in the original communication. Test your own IVR as a user.
- Have user-friendly technology. For websites that may be infrequently used, e.g. checking pension cash balance or 401(k), is there an easy way to check and reset passwords for users that can’t remember? Are you providing simple instructions for infrequent transactions, e.g. annual enrollment? Also, web information changes over time, so periodically check for broken links and user friendliness.
In my current RPO market research study, a track record of delivering quality customer service, including obtaining client references, is one of the top vendor selection criteria, as it was in my recently published learning BPO study. The Spherion survey is a reminder that customers will not be shy about sharing bad experiences. It’s best to be certain you know how your client’s employees really feel.
The good news is that HRO providers are, for the most part, providing a high level of service. For example, SourceRight Solutions, SFN Group’s RPO unit, was the top enterprise RPO provider in HRO Today’s 2010 RPO Bakers Dozen and it was rated number one in quality of services by provider clients. SourceRight Solutions was also only one of four companies to increase the satisfaction of existing customers while growing its customer base (the others included Kenexa, Pinstripe and AMS). I tip my hat to SFN Group for conducting the survey and for walking the talk!
Gary Bragar, Lead HRO Analyst, NelsonHall
Categories: Customer Service, hr outsourcing, hr outsourcing research, hro, HRO providers, hro research, nelsonhall, recruitment process outsourcing
Tags: AMS, hr outsourcing, hr outsourcing research, hro, Kenexa, Monster, nelsonhall, Pinstripe, recruitment process outsourcing, rpo, SFN Group, SourceRight Solutions, Spherion, TARP, Techical Assistance Research Program
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November 22, 2010
Although a working trip for me – as a learning session co-presenter with Raytheon, and on two panels, one on learning and one on RPO – I can easily say last week’s HRO Summit Europe got great marks in my book. About 40 percent of participants were buyers – a rare occurrence at conferences these days – with the balance being presenters, providers, analysts, press, researchers, staff and others. Discussions were lively and engaging, and…need I say anything about the beauty of Amsterdam, especially its architecture and canals?
My co-presentation with Raytheon, a learning outsourcing session called, “Bridging the Customer-Provider Divide,” was immediately followed by the learning panel, and witnessed buyer questions including: 1) What role does the retained HR learning organization play, including the role of the retained learning director, HR business partners and governance team?; 2) What lessons learned should a buyer that has just implemented a learning BPO contract incorporate?; 3) Why we are seeing more selective LBPO contracts and less full LBPO contracts?; and 4) What role does LBPO play in retaining knowledge as more employees will inevitably begin to retire?
While tracks and presentations covered the HRO gamut, two of the major focuses were talent issues and RPO. Dr. Peter Cappelli, Director of the Center for Human Resources at the Wharton School of Business, opened the conference with a keynote entitled, “A Question of Talent.” He began by discussing that, in the 1950’s and 1960’s, 24 years of service with just one company was the average tenure per employee. At the time, companies invested heavily in continuous training, and believed in lateral and upward mobility. He then moved to the sobering stats of today’s workforce. Companies of course still want loyal employees, yet very few do little to give their employees in-turn loyalty, and only one in four of succession plans are utilized. The result is organizations spending thousands of dollars in employee development, only to lose them to competitors.
It almost feels as if organizations accept this as a looming cloud norm in today’s workforce environment. But I vehemently oppose that viewpoint. If you look at the pure financials alone, conservative estimates are that it costs one and a half times as much of an employee’s salary to replace that individual due to the cost of recruitment, development, learning curve, etc. How can that possibly be perceived as good business? I am feeling like an evangelist as I’ve written about it so many times in my blogs, but employee satisfaction and robust initiatives focused on talent retention are vital to competitive advantage and business growth.
One of the largest and most well attended tracks at the conference was on RPO. I was also a member of an RPO panel discussion entitled, “Deep Dive: Driving the Future State of RPO,” along with Alexander Mann Solutions, SourceRight Solutions and a professor from Lancaster University. One question posed by a buyer member in the audience was how RPO has evolved. Each panelist, of course, had its own answer. Mine, not surprisingly as an industry analyst, is that by providing what I call “value-added services” or what I consider to be the “richer RPO services,” you are a true end-to-end RPO provider. This means: 1) services on the front end in workforce planning, talent strategy and employment branding to ensure the right employees with staying power are hired; 2) services in the middle to manage internal recruiting/mobility; and 3) services on the back end, including robust onboarding and ongoing, bi-directional employee engagement.
There are other shifts occurring, including interest in global RPO, and I will cover more on that and learning outsourcing issues discussed at the conference in upcoming blogs!
Gary Bragar, Lead HRO Analyst, NelsonHall
Categories: hr outsourcing, hr outsourcing research, hro, HRO contracts, hro research, lbpo, learning outsourcing, nelsonhall, outsourced learning, recruitment process outsourcing, rpo, rpo contracts, RPO providers
Tags: Alexander Mann Solutions, employee engagement, employment branding, global RPO, hr outsourcing, hro, HRO Europe Summit, hro research, lbpo, learning outsourcing, nelsonhall, outsourced learning, Raytheon Professional Services, recruitment process outsourcing, rpo, SourceRight Solutions, talent management, talent strategy, workforce planning
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September 10, 2010
In my April 16 blog “An RPO and MSP Combo: the Best of Both Worlds,” I wrote about the value of workforce solutions that are rooted in both RPO and Managed Service Provider (MSP) services to meet the dynamic and evolving needs for both contingent and permanent employee hiring. We’re now seeing an increasing number of these types of contracts being inked, and some providers are partnering to gain the breadth of offerings needed to win to-be-awarded deals.
Recently awarded contracts include:
• SourceRight Solutions’ – originally an RPO provider – multi-year deal with Siemens for provision of contingent labor procurement programs in the U.S.
• An MSP and RPO agreement between AMN Healthcare and Hendrick Medical Center
• Alexander Mann Solutions’ three-year recruitment, contingent workforce and employer branding contract in the U.K. with aerospace and defense engineering firm Cobham
Recent partnerships and M&As for the RPO/MSP combo include:
• The RightThing with ZeroChaos to provide contingent labor services alongside RPO. The RightThing, which was always considered a pureplay RPO provider, partnered with ZeroChaos to enable it to provide a broader range of recruitment solutions in today’s moving-target hiring marketplace
• AMN Healthcare acquiried Medfinders for its clinical workforce managed services program
• SourceRight Solutions and Hays, per their strategic alliance announced in 1Q10, launched WorldSource, a new service offering to manage and integrate global RPO and MSP programs. (And SourceRight Solutions also further expanded its own MSP offering)
The primary driver of escalating contract and partnership activity in this HRO segment is clear: as companies remain cautious due to continued low consumer confidence and ongoing market uncertainty, they are hiring more temporary employees and utilizing more contingent workforces than on-boarding new full-time hires. And let’s not forget buyers’ increasing desire to keep their portfolio of service providers to a minimum, particularly when in the same service line.
The bottom line is that vendors and buyers both win with the right workforce combination that best meets clients’ organizational objectives. I believe we will continue to see additional pureplay RPO specialists looking to partner to provide MSP and contingent workforce solutions to meet continued demand. And while contingent workforce solutions can be used in any industry, I believe the nature of seasonal demand and spikes in volumes will drive more of these types of contracts in healthcare, pharma, manufacturing, retail, technology and defense.
Gary Bragar, Senior HR Outsourcing Analyst, NelsonHall
Categories: hr outsourcing, hr outsourcing research, hro, HRO contracts, HRO mergers, HRO provider partnerships, HRO providers, hro research, nelsonhall, recruitment process outsourcing, rpo, rpo contracts, RPO providers
Tags: Alexander Mann, AMN Healthcare, contingent workforce, Hays, hr outsourcing, hro, managed service providers, nelsonhall, recruitment process outsourcing, rpo, RPO providers, SourceRight Solutions, temporary employees, The RightThing
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