We Don't Need No Consultants

Today's guest post is from Patrick J. Horgan of Paladin Associates.

Why Some Companies Don't Seek Needed Cost-Reduction Help

Cost-reduction is essential in today's economy, but unfortunately many managers have little experience in these activities. Mistakes in cost-reduction can damage morale, productivity, and can even precipitate a corporate death-spiral. Experts recommend independent cost-reduction consultants, but most companies don't seek external help. Their reasons sometimes make sense, but they are often emotional and thought through poorly. Here are some common rationalizations which prevent many companies from seeking the help and getting the results they really need:

"We don't need help."
"We can do cost-reduction ourselves". Or, "we should be able to do it ourselves." "We already have cost-reduction initiatives." "We will soon have cost-reduction initiatives underway." "External consultants will probably try to take credit for things we have already identified."

"We don't want help."
"Consultants may find things that are embarrassing or that we probably should have found. We may be blamed for these things." "We will not be able to personally control what they find or communicate." "We are currently too disorganized to undertake such an initiative." "We don't want a lot of change and turmoil."

"We can't afford help."
"Consultants charge a lot, usually up front." "We have no budget for this." "We can do it for less."

"We don't believe consultants can actually help."
"Consultants just feed back what we already know. They don't actually produce results." "Consultants won't understand our business." "How would we know if we actually saved anything?" "We've had bad experiences with consultants and cost-reduction projects in the past." "External consultants are against company policy, or require high-level approval."

"We are not the decision makers."
"We don't really know who decides this, and we don't want to ask." "Someone else is in charge of this; it's not our job." "IT/Telecom has sourcing responsibility; not Sourcing." "IT and Telecom are under different organizations, yet buy off of the same contract."

"It is not in my personal political interest to support this."
"Cost-reduction can be risky... might result in reorganization, reassignment, budget cuts, layoffs, new priorities, loss of power, change -- could be bad for me personally." "Our boss doesn't want to do this." Or, "Our boss might want to do this, but we don't." "If this doesn't work out, we might be blamed." (But maybe we should pretend to be interested and slow-roll this.)

"We don't have or control the resources to support such an effort."
"We have other priorities." "We don't have good data on costs and spending." "We don't have the staff for this." "We have lots of contract leakage as internal components are organizationally fragmented." "To capitalize on many initiatives may require cross-functional cooperation and coordination which we don't control, and priorities which we don't have."

"We don't want to disrupt our vendor relationships."
"We already have great prices." "We depend on our vendors for things other than price." "The supplier has a personal relationship with the CXO." "We really enjoy the annual Vendor Golf Weekend at Pebble Beach."

The Real Facts
Sometimes these rationales are valid, but most often they are not. Companies may have excellent relationships with their suppliers, but it's inescapable that continuous competition improves the breed and reduces cost. Cost-reduction falls directly to the bottom line, and should be pursued aggressively despite fuzzy reasons to the contrary.

Even though companies "ought" to be able to run effective cost-reduction programs themselves, in reality they frequently do not. For many reasons -- budgets, staffing, expertise, priorities, timing, politics, whatever -- the opportunities go unmined... and the potential savings go unrealized. Or they are done in an amateur fashion, often with unintended consequences. Most companies don't and probably can't have enough qualified resources to do this thoroughly.

Cost-reduction consultants do this for a living, not just during the occasional recession... they are experts and know all the tricks. External consultants can often help cut through internal politics and conflicts of interest. They can catalyze stalled activities and get them rolling.

Independent consultants can help analyze spending patterns, and specifically focus on and drive results... particularly if they are paid on a percentage of savings realized. This approach eliminates upfront fees, reduces risk, and insures an excellent ROI. The money saved can pay for fees many times over. External resources can accelerate cost-reduction savings. Additional bandwidth leverages employees, and gets more done, faster. Time is money.

External cost-reduction experts jump-start and insure execution of cost-reduction programs that can preserve a business in times like these. Cost-reduction programs should be win-win initiatives, structured and empowered to encourage cross-functional cooperation. They should be supported and regularly reviewed by high-level executives, not just lower-level employees who may fear blame or loss of status.

Thanks, Pat.

 

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Comments

  • 2/4/2009 10:15 AM Eric Strovink wrote:
    Great post, Patrick. A turn-around CEO I worked with in 1991 said it best:

    "Get the money."

    Also, it isn't necessary to invest 6 or 7 figures in software tools as an "ante" before savings can be realized, despite vendor claims to the contrary. The SI resource site (link at right) lists many cost-effective options.
  • 2/4/2009 4:36 PM Warren Dexter wrote:
    I appreciated the information and the angle. Many fine consultancy groups are emerging in the battle for cost reduction but the best test for these efforts is in the actual reduction in spend. Global Capacity, Inc. has an approach that covers the whole spectrum of cost reductions through products ranging from management of circuit at a monthly fee, to the optimization of a carrier-sized cloud for fees paid on a contigency basis only after the savings are identified and realized by the customer.

    As I have watched the segment, it appears that there are more and more telcos that have embraced off-net sourcing, but your article puts a nice bow on the idea that the trend is just beginning.

    I would be happy to hear your impressions on the types of sourcing that the Global Capacity team have implemented. Contact our company at the http://www.globalcapacity.com web site to learn about our approach.

    Keep up the good work, we will follow the blog to see what we can learn through collaboration.
  • 2/5/2009 9:58 AM Bill Dorn wrote:
    Great post Pat and Michael!
    I think you forgot one though:

    "We have software that does that already" ...or something like that.

    We often see software and systems as the biggest excuse as to why a company does not need a consultant, even though we have NEVER been in an engagement where we were not able to improve pricing and service after something was "sourced" through software alone.
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