ASMC PDI - Washington-ASMC National Capital Region PDI
Transcription
ASMC PDI - Washington-ASMC National Capital Region PDI
ASMC National Capital Region: Professional Development Institute ASMC National Capital Region Professional Development Institute 10 March 2016 1 EDUCATION TRAINING PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT 1 ASMC National Capital Region: Professional Development Institute Innovation Insight Sessions Innovation Insight Sessions: 1040 - 1150 • • • • • • • EDUCATION Mr. Michael Allen, Beacon Global Strategies Mr. Scott Forrest, USN Ms. Lauren Leo, NASA Mr. Mark Ryland, Amazon Web Services Mr Phil Searle, Founder, Chazey Partners Brig.Gen. Greg Touhill, USAF(Ret), DHS Mr. Leif Ulstrup, PrimeHook Technology TRAINING PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT 2 DELIVERING THE PROMISE … Rapid Benefits with Alternative Shared Service Models March 10, 2016 © Chazey Partners 2016 Agenda Chazey Profile Why Shared Services Trends in Shared Services Why Shared Services in the Public Sector Case Studies Tactics & Insights Chazey Partners Profile Who We Are: Founded 2006 • Global offices headquartered in California • Over 50 full-time and 70 specialist resources What We Do: Strategic advice • Project management • Technical & domain expertise • Business continuity Chazey Partners: Serving multiple industries, globally, both private & public sector Where We Focus: Transformation of the back office • Human resources • Finance • IT • Procurement • Facilities The Chazey Difference: Continuity of staff • Practitioners first • Knowledge transfer • Engage client in transformation Who We Have Worked With OUR CLIENTS WHERE HAVE WE COME FROM Agenda Chazey Profile Why Shared Services Trends in Shared Services Why Shared Services in the Public Sector Case Studies Tactics & Insights Achieve the Triple Benefits of Shared Services Higher Quality Lower Costs Improved Control What Exactly is Shared Services? Elevator Speech Definition Goal How-To • Treats its internal clients as if they were an external client. Treats them with the same level of respect and service that external clients expect • Provides non-core services to the “business”, employing a specialist team, geographically unconstrained, and focusing on the requirements of the internal client. This involves a philosophy and approach totally unlike traditional “corporate-driven” centralization. • Has the goal of providing high quality, non-core, but mission critical services (which can include both repetitive common processes and more specialized professional services) to the business at lower cost and more efficiently than the business could otherwise provide for itself. • Achieves cost savings and higher quality of service by leveraging organizational re-alignment, economies of scale, technology, client interaction framework, standardized end-to-end processes, and best practices. Centralization/De-Centralization Cycle Decentralized Challenges Disparate processes Multiple standards Duplication of effort Different control environments High cost and costs unclear across the business Not scalable Centralized Shared Benefits Responsive to Business and Operational needs Business/ Operations control decisions Customized solutions to meet Business/ Operational requirements Highly client focused Commercially driven Service Partnership Agreements Clear unit costs Flexible delivery Clear understanding of drivers and activities Benefits Common systems and support Consistent standards and controls Tight control environment Economies of scale Challenges Remote from business Unresponsive and inflexible No Business/ Operational control over costs Viewed as central overhead Prevalence of shadow operations Agenda Chazey Profile Why Shared Services Trends in Shared Services Why Shared Services in the Public Sector Case Studies Tactics & Insights General Trends in Shared Services • Started in mid-1980s - driven by private sector multinationals • Successfully implemented Shared Services initiatives achieve “20%-45% cost reductions from the current state” (The Shared Services Roundtable, March 2015) • More prevalent today in midsized companies and businesses • Significant focus and growth in the Public Sector globally, after initially being slower to adopt General Trends in Shared Services “What is your current service delivery model?” • 100% of Hackett’s top quartile benchmarked enterprises leverage Shared Services (Hackett 2013) • New adopters are moving directly to multifunctional/Global Business Services model as part of their implementation strategy (Deloitte, 2015 Global Shared Services Survey, February 2015) SSON’s Global Report 2016: State of Shared Services & Outsourcing Industry General Trends in Shared Services “I believe our current Shared Services strategy will deliver a dramatic and recognized value to the organization – beyond cost savings.” Don’t Know - 5.03% Strongly Disagree – 2.84% Disagree – 5.03% Neither Agree Nor Disagree – 11.60% Agree – 45.95% Over 75% agree “Moving up the value chain” Strongly Agree – 29.54% SSON’s Global Report 2016: State of Shared Services & Outsourcing Industry General Trends in Shared Services “How does business (your customer) define value?” “How do you demonstrate/report value to your customers?” SSON’s Global Report 2016: State of Shared Services & Outsourcing Industry General Trends in Shared Services Automation solutions implemented: • Technology options continue to grow (spend on technology is not the problem) SSON’s Global Report 2016: State of Shared Services & Outsourcing Industry Agenda Chazey Profile Why Shared Services Trends in Shared Services Why Shared Services in the Public Sector Case Studies Tactics & Insights Why Shared Services in the Public Sector? Growth in Services Challenges Technology Demand Funding Decreases Benefits Unified Shared Services SharedManagement Benefits Challenges Workforce Demographics Cost of Services to Public FEELING THE “SQUEEZE” Why Shared Services in Public Sector? Recent Creation of the Unified Shared Services Management Office creating more incentive and visibility to build Shared Services. Significant funding issues today … everywhere. Shared Services can deliver potential “triple benefit” of efficiency/effectiveness/control. Why not? Has worked in the Private Sector for 25+ years, and is also working in the Public Sector today. The same basic challenges and significant opportunities exist around implementing but need to be adapted and applied differently. Cost savings from the “back office” can be used to fund core and front line services. Outsourcing opportunities continue to expand and improve. Why Shared Services in Public Sector? Remember that the scope across the “back office” is very significant. Must determine what needs to be physically close to the internal “customer” or “client” vs what can be done remotely. Consider who your “client” is – internal and external. Also need to think about “citizens” as key stakeholders. Although public sector adoption of shared services has grown, the results achieved do not yet approach those in the private sector. Part of the solution to the new socio-economic challenges Impact of an aging population Increased international competition More difficult economic environment Unique Challenges Facing Shared Services in Public Sector “Culture” Tenure Change Management Transparency creates critics “Failures” jumped on “Politics” Across System State and Federal Unique Challenges to Public Sector Workforce: Locations, Departments, Leadership Shifts Governance Issues “Traditional Silos” Funding Sources Increased Costs Agenda Chazey Profile Why Shared Services Trends in Shared Services Why Shared Services in the Public Sector Case Studies Tactics & Insights • Scope • Sharing HR, procurement, finance & payroll • Potential savings of £400m to £600m per year in administration costs • Based on moving all departments to upper quartile efficiency levels • Currently no departments are operating in upper quartile • History • Part of 2004 Initiative from Office of Government Commerce • Full review in 2008 reported annual savings exceeding £20 billion • 2011 review found that past efforts mainly focused on technology and end-to-end process ownership with reductions in hand-offs • National Audit Office (NAO) identified some challenges as well as successes • Next Generation Shared Services Strategic Plan • Create Crown Oversight Function to work with departments to drive performance • Eight Shared Service Centers reduced to five • Two independent of any single customer (assigned to Arvato & Steria) • Three standalone in terms of operations and subject to performance monitoring • Single ERP platform, without which Government will struggle to reach targets • Scope • Provides services across Ministry of Defense • Functions include HR, finance, information & vetting • One of the largest Shared Services Centers in Europe • History • Created in July 2011 • Four year contract worth £36m awarded to Serco with option to extend for further year • Based on zero management fee, all Serco’s earnings are performance-based • Savings of £71m expected over life of contract • Current Status • Contract to end in April 2016 (not exercising option to extend) • Serco: “contract has exceeded expectations”, “Decision of MOD to end contract” • MOD: “contract reached natural end” • To date has achieved £64m; full anticipated savings expected over final year • Ministry has decided to initially bring DBS back within department • Considering options • Passed legislation to give Internal Services Agency (ISA) power to operate as a business • Autonomy of operations • Divergence from “normal” • Transactional and Administrative services into a single model • Payroll & Benefits, AP, IT Services, & IT Operations • Benefits Achieved • • • • $8.8m in annual savings, net of investment Government-wide strategies Economies of scale with more consistent service delivery Opportunities for staff development and improved retention • The US Department of Heath and Human Services (DHHS) Shared Services “Program Support Center” (PSC) provides support services to all components of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and other Federal Government agencies worldwide. PSC has a broad range of over 40 services and products. • To clarify customer confusion around “true costs” or “full costs” in an allocated environment, the PSC operates with funding received at the beginning of the year, with the commitment to ensure costs are agreed upon. • They work throughout the year with their customers to ensure cost discipline – and agree upon any additional funding needs via Service Level Agreements (SLAs) or Inter Agency Agreements (IAAs). • Good initial work in the Business Case and Design • However, due to time schedule, the Build cycle was compressed • Resulted in sub-optimal services delivery and customer issues • Fixed by having a review of services, leadership change and a comprehensive playbook of areas to modify • Now initial areas have been corrected and center is growing services again • Initial Shared Services work in Finance, Information Technology and Human Resource started by the governing board and an external firm • Minimal “buy-in” with the functional staff at each university • Lack of “ownership” on the financial targets, objectives and timeline as a result • Supplemental exercise initiated to validate findings • • Benefit in validating, and in some cases modifying findings Larger benefit in that each functional area worked closely on the engagement • Buy-in was achieved for a much larger number of areas • Foundation laid for future Shared Services activities Unlocking Efficiencies and Demonstrating ROI 44% Return Case Study – City of Houston Human Resources • • • • • Problem: City facing $50-70M Budget Deficit Opportunities: Centralization; reduce liabilities; improve efficiency; eliminate redundancy Plan: Implement Shared Services Process: – Step 1: People – Redefine Roles and Responsibilities • Anyone spending over 51% of time moved to Central HR – Step 2: Process Standardization • Focus on quality of service and transparency – Step 3: Technology Adds Capability • Reduce reliance on expensive and unnecessary add-on solutions Results – HR Staff to Employee ratio improved from 1:38 to 1:119 – Improved quality of service – More efficient, better placed staff – Self-service functionality – Improved understanding of customer issues – Enhanced use of SAP Capital Management Module: $650k of annual savings Agenda Chazey Profile Why Shared Services Trends in Shared Services Why Shared Services in the Public Sector Case Studies Tactics & Insights Tactics & Insights (1 of 2) • • • • • • Having a Business Case is key: improved decision making & accountability mechanism Consider functions, processes, sub-processes, locations, operating units and entities It is really important to distinguish between “solutions” vs “quick fixes” Multifunctional now often the chosen way to proceed Consider how far up the value chain you want to go Senior level executive sponsorship is key - executives must understand and support the roll-out • Do not underestimate the change management required • Consider a multi-faceted communication and advisory approach • Generate a culture of service and continuous improvement Tactics & Insights (2 of 2) • • • • • Remember always that the project does not end with “go-live” Assign your best resources and people to the project Assign end-to-end process owners Separate transformation from ongoing activities Offer end-to-end services by provisioning as many non-core services as possible under one organizational umbrella • Realignment can help remove silos and foster a strong shared service culture and team spirit • Enable succession planning, job rotation, new opportunities as well as targeted and consistent training programs • Do things differently – that’s the whole point! Top Three Takeaways 1. Shared Services can be complex, but it is not rocket science 2. Start with a Roadmap and supporting business case 3. You are not alone, others have gone before ASMC National Capital Region: Professional Development Institute Luncheon: Atrium Hall Luncheon Keynote: Lieutenant General Anthony R. Ierardi, USA Director, Force Structure, Resources & Assessment, J8 The Joint Staff Note: Please be seated by 12:00 EDUCATION TRAINING PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT36 ASMC National Capital Region: Professional Development Institute Luncheon: Atrium Hall ASMC National Update: Mr. Al Runnels, USA, CDFM, CGFM ASMC Executive Director EDUCATION TRAINING PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT37 ASMC National Capital Region: Professional Development Institute Post NCR PDI Events Speed Mentoring • Government only, Pre-registration required • Meridian DE at 1700 ASMC 2015 Annual Survey o Invitation Only o Horizon at 1700 [Concourse Level] o Host: Mr. Al Runnels, USA, CDFM, CGFM ASMC Executive Director Mr. Mark Easton, Deputy Chief Financial Officer, Department of Defense Mr. Doug Bennett, Principal Deputy, Assistant Secretary of the Air Force, Department of the Air Force Mr. Joe Marshall, Principal Deputy, Assistant Secretary of the Navy, Department of the Navy Mr. Craig Bennett, Deputy Chief Financial Officer, United States Coast Guard VADM Louis Crenshaw, Ret, USN, Moderator o • 1.5 CPE Credits o o o o EDUCATION TRAINING PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT38 ASMC National Capital Region: Professional Development Institute With Gratitude to our 2016 Corporate Sponsors EDUCATION TRAINING PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT39