Outsourcing: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) Created page with "A great boon for management consultants, but a chocolate starfish for anyone else. Management consultancy textbooks will glowlingly quote Anthony Burgess: “A sure sign of a..." |
Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 9: | Line 9: | ||
What this misses | What this misses | ||
*it's low value, not no value. | *it's low value, not no value. | ||
{{egg}} | |||
{{draft}} |
Revision as of 16:45, 24 August 2017
A great boon for management consultants, but a chocolate starfish for anyone else.
Management consultancy textbooks will glowlingly quote Anthony Burgess: “A sure sign of an amateur is too much detail to compensate for too little life”.
Management consultants aren't generaly much good with literature. This they take as a mandate to ignore the messy intractable details of a business process, and instead look at the big picture. A good rule of thumb is Pareto's 80/20 rule: 20% of the activities will consume 80% of the costs.
Step one - undoubtedly right - leads to step 2: if we could only identify what that 80% is, we could relocate it to a cheaper means of production and bingo - easy cost savings.
What this misses
- it's low value, not no value.