There’s good news and
bad news about the burgeoning professional services market in Asia Pacific.
On the
upside, demand for professional services in
the region continues to increase meaning there are plenty of business
opportunities for existing and new professional services organisations (PSOs).
However, on the downside, given that so much of the success of projects depends
on how PSO employees deliver those projects, there’s a real talent war underway
as organisations struggle both to attract and then retain high-performing
project staff.
Global
research, consulting and training organisation Service Performance Insight (SPI),
which focuses on PSOs, examines this good news/bad news phenomenon, which it
dubs a “double-edged sword” in its ‘The State of Professional Services in the
Asia Pacific Region,’ a recent report commissioned by NetSuite.
SPI
estimates that globally there are over one million PSOs with a combined annual
revenue of more than US $4 trillion. “Professional Services is the fastest
growing segment of the global economy due in large part to the fact that companies
in all other vertical industries are increasingly outsourcing and out-tasking
their non-core business processes and technology to specialised PS providers,”
according to the report. It’s also a highly fragmented market with the world’s
top 200 largest PSOs (those with more than 5,000 employees) accounting for less
than 5% of that $4 trillion revenue figure.
Around
the world and in APAC, the professional services market is in transition as all
sizes of PSOs are building out broader portfolios of services – whether within
a specific vertical or crossing multiple verticals. Growth for PSOs is
determined by how successful companies are in engaging and retaining employees
who can time and again deliver on-time, on-budget projects with consistently
high customer satisfaction scores. According to SPI research, the PS employee
annual attrition rate is at 10 percent in APAC as
compared with 9.4 percent in Americas and 6.7 percent in EMEA.
In
the report, SPI shares four key pointers to help PSOs win the talent war:
Concentrate
on attracting and then optimising talent. It’s not sufficient to woo
high-performing project personnel to your organisation, you need to make sure
you make efficient use of them once they’re on board. Part of that process is
ensuring PSO staff have complete, real-time access to all relevant project
information at any time and from any device. This is achieved by adopting
professional services automation (PSA) software tightly integrated to
financial, human resources (HR), sales and marketing applications or via a
comprehensive services resource planning (SRP)
solution which unites all those applications in a single suite.
Align
project marketing, sales and service delivery. Lay the groundwork to ensure
your talented project team are engaged in the right kind of opportunities which
will both play to their strengths and help continue to burnish your company’s
reputation. This is done by marketing and sales working closely together so
marketing targets customers with projects that are a good fit with previous
deliverables and then sales continues that process and then hands off to the
project team.
Establish
service delivery methodologies and technologies. By creating and continually
evolving best and standard practices for how projects will be tackled, you are
again helping to set the stage for successful engagements between your project
talent and your customers.
Solve
the people problem. While salary increases and additional bonuses are one way
to tackle employee retention, it’s necessary to take a more creative approach.
Invest in your talent through ongoing training and make use of flexible and
innovative work policies and rewarding work cultures to maintain and develop
the talent resource pool. “Continuous learning is no longer a nice-to-have;
it has become a precondition of survival,” report states.
Successful
PSOs, according to SPI, are those which are using a ‘secret sauce’ – a
combination of attracting and retaining talented employees, establishing and
continually optimizing best practices and methodologies, and implementing integrated
systems – PSA or SRP – to gain real-time visibility across all aspects of their
PS operations.
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