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Suggest You - To Outsource or Not to Outsource
Let Your Client's Know Your Customer Service Expectations e>At American Retail Supply, we make mistakes. We spend lots of time and money to make our procedures as efficient and foolproof as possible, but we still make mistakes. So, where do I get off writing these columns that so often highlight the need for Exceptional Customer Service?While nobody likes to be at the receiving end of a mistake, we all know that people make mistakes. Exceptional Customer Service requires that we learn from these mistakes and take action to reduce or eliminate them, but what really brings customers back is your response when you mess up.Here are a few points to consider as you examine your customer service. Can your front line people solve the huge majority of your customer’s problems? You’ve heard it from me before and if you read this column you’ll hear it again. People don’t want hassles and very few are out to take advantage of you. I believe the true test for Exceptional Customer Service is, Can the first person your customer talks to solve the problem?Do your customers know that Exceptional Customer Service is what they should expect from you?I get a few phone calls each year from customers who don’t think they are getting Exceptional Customer Service from us. Almost all of these calls start with, “I read in your newsletter that customer service is important to you, I don’t think I’m getting very good service at all...” or “A few months ago when I was on hold I heard that you wanted me to call you if I had a problem that wasn’t being taken care of.” Sure nobody likes getting calls like this but in another way I LOVE GETTING THEM!What’s the alternative? For most businesses it’s a customer who really doesn’t want the hassle of complaining. The customer who goes to the competition and not only doesn’t recommend you to others, but maybe even bad mouths you. I love customers who give us the opportunity to MAKE THEM HAPPY. Find a way to tell your customers that you want to know if they are not ha Clearly, the writer is the first function to staff internally, the graphic artist is a distant second, and the copy editor is third. It is unclear whether most companies ever benefit from staffing production specialists internally, because so little of their time is required on any given project. Now let’s examine the annual cost of an employee writer vs. a contract writer, using the previous scenario. The contract writer will be working for 42 weeks (three 14-week projects), and the employee will be working for 52 weeks. (Remember, the figures we’re using here for the employee are fully loaded with benefits and overhead.) The chart below shows how the figures add up. Annual Cost of Employee vs. Contract Writer
So at 42 weeks of continuous work, the cost of hiring a writer becomes somewhat comparable to the cost of using a contract writer, assuming our sample scenario is typical. You should be absolutely sure that you have that critical 42 weeks of work lined up, though. If you hire a writer internally and the work flow falls significantly short of that break point, it can be very expensive. It is my exper Manifestation of Corruption In these days of restricted head count and tight budgets, the question of whether to outsource or hire in-house staff is more critical than ever. The technical publications function, however vital, is undergoing more scrutiny and also facing greater challenges than ever before. Companies that already employ an in-house technical publications department are looking at doing more with fewer resources. Start-ups, with no internal technical publications staff, are struggling with how to develop technical documents in the most cost-effective way.Freedom of choice can have both positive and negative consequences for peoples that developed democracy within their states as a leading regime. When a person ids to make a choice between the good and evil, the question about what is good and what is easy arises. The majority will pick the easy way without thinking about the consequences of their choice, though they may be quite destructing. World’s existence is a matter of balance between good and evil that are to coexist and give people that freedom of choice they are supposed to do. A disbalance drives us to the point when nothing can be certain and actions we take make the situation even worse. Weak human beings are subjected to stress and other harmful influences that require simultaneous actions that border on the necessity to choose between right and easy. The ways to ease the life of a person are not that easy.There is a good characteristic that can be given to a number of events that are devastating to the system and the word that characterizes it is corruption. If you take a good dictionary you will get another proof that the English language is poly-semantic. The first and the most general meaning for corruption is the state of things when a specific matter comes to decay, rotten or decompose. When used by politicians, economists and other representatives of social sciences, it means implantation of illegal ways into the solid system for personal gain.Corruption is characterized by bribery, embezzlement, extortion, nepotism and other ways to corrupt the generally accepted system. Bribery is a well-known crime that means offering, giving or receiving things of value in order to gain influence or control over an official or other person that stands at a wheel of duty. Embezzlement is the fabricated ownership of property without the agreement between the owner and the exploitation entity. Extortion is a crime that involves a demand of matters of considerate value, threatening to harm life property or the surrounding of This article examines the pros and cons of entrusting all or part of the technical publications function to outside vendors. By examining a typical project, I will analyze costs and also answer questions about when to staff which functions internally. Numbers Speak for Themselves For both start-up and mature companies, the basic questions are: When do you outsource your technical publications, and when do you staff technical publications internally? There are no quick answers to these questions, because there are several factors to consider. The easy part of the answer is straightforward number crunching. The more difficult part of the answer depends on how large your company is, the nature of your products/technologies, and how you operate internally. I can’t provide all the answers for your specific company. However, drawing on my 19 years of experience in managing the technical documentation function, this article provides a framework for analysis and decision-making vis-?-vis outsourcing and/or staffing the various functions vital to technical publications. Let’s take the easy part of the equation first by examining a typical case: Company X requires a new documentation set for a complex piece of equipment, say a new line of network routers. The associated document has the following requirements:
The people required for the project are:
If these people are employees, the cost of using them includes salary, benefits and other overhead. (Figures used are based on San Francisco Bay Area salaries, benefits and overhead. National averages will be lower.) If the same functions are outsourced for this project, the costs are not burdened by benefits and overhead. (The costs used for contract workers in this analysis are averages, derived from a range of typical costs for each function. The actual cost in any specific instance will vary.) Cost of Outsourcing on 14-Week Project
The savings in this scenario is $55,969 when the work is outsourced. If you’re just looking at 14 week’s worth of work, the monetary analysis is compellingly in favor of outsourcing. But of course, most companies have more than 14 weeks worth of technical documentation work. On average, a typical company has two or three releases of a product, resulting in two or three projects (of approximately 14 weeks duration) per year. Over a year’s time, then, let’s assume a company has three technical documentation projects that last about 14 weeks each (for a total of 42 weeks). Using the same figures as above, let’s look at the annual cost of using outsourced labor vs. in-house employees. The table below provides the data. Annual Cost of Outsourcing vs. Employee
The reason for the rather eye-popping savings of $250,749 is that contractors go away between jobs, and employees don’t. A good rule of thumb is: If you have 42 (or more) consecutive weeks of work, in-house staffing is economically feasible. If your work flow comes in bursts of activity, followed by weeks or months of low activity, outsourcing remains the best solution. Which Functions Should Be Staffed First? Even if you have a fairly steady flow of technical publications work, there remains another decision: Which functions are best staffed in-house, and which are best outsourced? Looking at the sample 14-week project, the percent of time each function is required during that 14-week period is presented in the chart below. Percent of Time Required During 14-Week Project (560 Hours)
Clearly, the writer is the first function to staff internally, the graphic artist is a distant second, and the copy editor is third. It is unclear whether most companies ever benefit from staffing production specialists internally, because so little of their time is required on any given project. Now let’s examine the annual cost of an employee writer vs. a contract writer, using the previous scenario. The contract writer will be working for 42 weeks (three 14-week projects), and the employee will be working for 52 weeks. (Remember, the figures we’re using here for the employee are fully loaded with benefits and overhead.) The chart below shows how the figures add up. Annual Cost of Employee vs. Contract Writer
So at 42 weeks of continuous work, the cost of hiring a writer becomes somewhat comparable to the cost of using a contract writer, assuming our sample scenario is typical. You should be absolutely sure that you have that critical 42 weeks of work lined up, though. If you hire a writer internally and the work flow falls significantly short of that break point, it can be very expensive. It is my experi Steps to Success - Information Into Action owever, drawing on my 19 years of experience in managing the technical documentation function, this article provides a framework for analysis and decision-making vis-?-vis outsourcing and/or staffing the various functions vital to technical publications.In my teaser line I coined the phrase, "The difference between average people and difference makers". If you have no idea what that means or think you have an understanding of what I am trying to say, then read on; let's get on the same page.So you want to be rich and famous? Who doesn't? It may seem a bit shallow to say, but I believe that everyone wants a certain level of comfort where they no longer worry about anything money related and have a strong enough confidence in their daily relationships to go out and persevere to the fullest each day. So how do you go about doing that? What is the difference between someone who does that and someone who cannot do that? It's simple; read on.My goal is to introduce the difference between the average success-seeking individual and the successFUL individual. What is the successful guy doing that the average guy can't seem to grasp? Both read a thousand books and both take advice from someone who's been there and done that before.Here's the difference: the average guy reads his thousand books. In fact, he reads them twice. He gets his hands on every square inch of new knowledge that he can and he takes it in. Now don't get me wrong, this is a good thing. But what's missing? See if you can figure it out.The successful guy reads those same one thousand books; but it takes him twice as long. Maybe it takes him THREE TIMES as long. But then he does something that the average guy wouldn't think of doing...HE PUTS IT INTO ACTION. He reads a chapter, meditates on it, and DOES it. Not only does he DO it, he does it until he GETS IT. Simple huh? I didn't start writing articles and sharing my information about my marketing techniques after waiting until I felt good enough to be a guru. I just "trial and errored" it out, and started DOING it. I didn't know what I was getting myself into and I didn't care. The truth is that my content isn't the best stuff out there...but it's out there.You can get out there too. It's more than Let’s take the easy part of the equation first by examining a typical case: Company X requires a new documentation set for a complex piece of equipment, say a new line of network routers. The associated document has the following requirements:
The people required for the project are:
If these people are employees, the cost of using them includes salary, benefits and other overhead. (Figures used are based on San Francisco Bay Area salaries, benefits and overhead. National averages will be lower.) If the same functions are outsourced for this project, the costs are not burdened by benefits and overhead. (The costs used for contract workers in this analysis are averages, derived from a range of typical costs for each function. The actual cost in any specific instance will vary.) Cost of Outsourcing on 14-Week Project
The savings in this scenario is $55,969 when the work is outsourced. If you’re just looking at 14 week’s worth of work, the monetary analysis is compellingly in favor of outsourcing. But of course, most companies have more than 14 weeks worth of technical documentation work. On average, a typical company has two or three releases of a product, resulting in two or three projects (of approximately 14 weeks duration) per year. Over a year’s time, then, let’s assume a company has three technical documentation projects that last about 14 weeks each (for a total of 42 weeks). Using the same figures as above, let’s look at the annual cost of using outsourced labor vs. in-house employees. The table below provides the data. Annual Cost of Outsourcing vs. Employee
The reason for the rather eye-popping savings of $250,749 is that contractors go away between jobs, and employees don’t. A good rule of thumb is: If you have 42 (or more) consecutive weeks of work, in-house staffing is economically feasible. If your work flow comes in bursts of activity, followed by weeks or months of low activity, outsourcing remains the best solution. Which Functions Should Be Staffed First? Even if you have a fairly steady flow of technical publications work, there remains another decision: Which functions are best staffed in-house, and which are best outsourced? Looking at the sample 14-week project, the percent of time each function is required during that 14-week period is presented in the chart below. Percent of Time Required During 14-Week Project (560 Hours)
Clearly, the writer is the first function to staff internally, the graphic artist is a distant second, and the copy editor is third. It is unclear whether most companies ever benefit from staffing production specialists internally, because so little of their time is required on any given project. Now let’s examine the annual cost of an employee writer vs. a contract writer, using the previous scenario. The contract writer will be working for 42 weeks (three 14-week projects), and the employee will be working for 52 weeks. (Remember, the figures we’re using here for the employee are fully loaded with benefits and overhead.) The chart below shows how the figures add up. Annual Cost of Employee vs. Contract Writer
So at 42 weeks of continuous work, the cost of hiring a writer becomes somewhat comparable to the cost of using a contract writer, assuming our sample scenario is typical. You should be absolutely sure that you have that critical 42 weeks of work lined up, though. If you hire a writer internally and the work flow falls significantly short of that break point, it can be very expensive. It is my exper Use Your Answering Machine To Get You More Clients tions are outsourced for this project, the costs are not burdened by benefits and overhead. (The costs used for contract workers in this analysis are averages, derived from a range of typical costs for each function. The actual cost in any specific instance will vary.)Another effective marketing tool is your answering machine.Most gift basket business owner use it to entertain callers.Some messages people usually use to entertain are:“This is the Bobby’s residence. Sorry we are not at home right now. Please leave a message after the tone“ “You have just reach 058 434 43433. I’m not available at the moment…..“This is not a professional way of doing business and it would not help you get more customers. You should record what you do and the service you provide. It must be used as another way to position yourself as an expert.Market yourself with your voiceYou are going to have a marketing message on your answer machine. Clients that call you are interesting in you business so they would be interested in listen to a message that interest them if you not available.Answering Machine ScriptSo, instead of saying, “This is the Bobby’s residence. Sorry we are not at home right now. Please leave a message after the tone“. Why not say “Hello, Thank you for calling to discuss how to improve your business and get more clients. It’s Anne Williams, Your Local Gift Basket Producers.”“I’m quite busy at the moment but your call is extremely important to me. So at the tone, please leave your name, telephone number and a detailed message slowly and clearly and I’ll guarantee getting back to you.”“All my gift baskets are designed to improve your business and bring you more clients. You can also go to my website to immediately download a report titled ’10 Way to attract more clients to your business’ from www.giftbasketproducer.com”“Thanks for calling Your Local Gift Basket Producers and I look forward to speaking with you later.”The email has a CALL TO ACTION in it; to leave a message and visit your website. So whatever you call to action may be; to sign up for your newsletter, to visit your website, call for a free consultation, or email you to set up an a Cost of Outsourcing on 14-Week Project
The savings in this scenario is $55,969 when the work is outsourced. If you’re just looking at 14 week’s worth of work, the monetary analysis is compellingly in favor of outsourcing. But of course, most companies have more than 14 weeks worth of technical documentation work. On average, a typical company has two or three releases of a product, resulting in two or three projects (of approximately 14 weeks duration) per year. Over a year’s time, then, let’s assume a company has three technical documentation projects that last about 14 weeks each (for a total of 42 weeks). Using the same figures as above, let’s look at the annual cost of using outsourced labor vs. in-house employees. The table below provides the data. Annual Cost of Outsourcing vs. Employee
The reason for the rather eye-popping savings of $250,749 is that contractors go away between jobs, and employees don’t. A good rule of thumb is: If you have 42 (or more) consecutive weeks of work, in-house staffing is economically feasible. If your work flow comes in bursts of activity, followed by weeks or months of low activity, outsourcing remains the best solution. Which Functions Should Be Staffed First? Even if you have a fairly steady flow of technical publications work, there remains another decision: Which functions are best staffed in-house, and which are best outsourced? Looking at the sample 14-week project, the percent of time each function is required during that 14-week period is presented in the chart below. Percent of Time Required During 14-Week Project (560 Hours)
Clearly, the writer is the first function to staff internally, the graphic artist is a distant second, and the copy editor is third. It is unclear whether most companies ever benefit from staffing production specialists internally, because so little of their time is required on any given project. Now let’s examine the annual cost of an employee writer vs. a contract writer, using the previous scenario. The contract writer will be working for 42 weeks (three 14-week projects), and the employee will be working for 52 weeks. (Remember, the figures we’re using here for the employee are fully loaded with benefits and overhead.) The chart below shows how the figures add up. Annual Cost of Employee vs. Contract Writer
So at 42 weeks of continuous work, the cost of hiring a writer becomes somewhat comparable to the cost of using a contract writer, assuming our sample scenario is typical. You should be absolutely sure that you have that critical 42 weeks of work lined up, though. If you hire a writer internally and the work flow falls significantly short of that break point, it can be very expensive. It is my exper Looking For Great Ideas For What Business Gifts To Give To Bosses Or Co-workers? des the data.When you come up with great ideas for business gifts by looking at all of the wonderful possibilities available on the market today, you will be very pleased. Merchandise like nice office supplies that serve a practical purpose as well as looking great, or office items that are strictly for use as elegant office d?cor, there are many types of business gifts. Search for great business gifts that no one else will think of. You can come up with the very best business gifts of all when you reach out to find the perfect merchandise for your office or business location. Business gifts can be virtually anything, depending in the situation that warrants the purchase of top-of-the-line business gifts.For example:Say you have a real knack for picking out office d?cor, and furthermore, you have really been able to get a feel for the type of office d?cor that best suits your boss’s personal taste, if the business gift you need is for your boss, you may want to select a nice clock, a sculpture or even a painting as a business gift. Not your typical business gift, right. No matter, let your business gifts be original and unique ideas that no one else in the office will duplicate.Find something ideal for that office party on any occasion. If you are looking for a business gift for an office party, whether it is a Christmas party, or a birthday party for a co-worker, or a celebration of the company’s recent success, you will have the very best business gift for the circumstances if you browse around for the perfect business gifts you can find.Not only are there the standard fruit baskets that seem to go over so well, but also you can find business gifts with chocolate assortments, office supplies and accessories, fine wines and expensive cheeses and much, much more—and at very reasonable prices too! You can even have them delivered right to your office!Find the perfect business gifts you can, and maybe you will be the brown nose of the year. Or perhaps you will Annual Cost of Outsourcing vs. Employee
The reason for the rather eye-popping savings of $250,749 is that contractors go away between jobs, and employees don’t. A good rule of thumb is: If you have 42 (or more) consecutive weeks of work, in-house staffing is economically feasible. If your work flow comes in bursts of activity, followed by weeks or months of low activity, outsourcing remains the best solution. Which Functions Should Be Staffed First? Even if you have a fairly steady flow of technical publications work, there remains another decision: Which functions are best staffed in-house, and which are best outsourced? Looking at the sample 14-week project, the percent of time each function is required during that 14-week period is presented in the chart below. Percent of Time Required During 14-Week Project (560 Hours)
Clearly, the writer is the first function to staff internally, the graphic artist is a distant second, and the copy editor is third. It is unclear whether most companies ever benefit from staffing production specialists internally, because so little of their time is required on any given project. Now let’s examine the annual cost of an employee writer vs. a contract writer, using the previous scenario. The contract writer will be working for 42 weeks (three 14-week projects), and the employee will be working for 52 weeks. (Remember, the figures we’re using here for the employee are fully loaded with benefits and overhead.) The chart below shows how the figures add up. Annual Cost of Employee vs. Contract Writer
So at 42 weeks of continuous work, the cost of hiring a writer becomes somewhat comparable to the cost of using a contract writer, assuming our sample scenario is typical. You should be absolutely sure that you have that critical 42 weeks of work lined up, though. If you hire a writer internally and the work flow falls significantly short of that break point, it can be very expensive. It is my exper What We Get is What We See e>Your ability to develop an energizing vision for your team or organization determines whether you're be a high performing leader or a Technomanager, technician, supervisor, project manager, administrator, or bureaucrat. At the heart of leading others is your ability to develop and communicate a clear and compelling picture of your team or organization's preferred future.Within two months of joining forces in 1981, Art McNeil and I developed the first of many visions for The Achieve Group (a training and consulting we founded and eventually sold to California-based Zenger Miller Inc.) It became a yearly ritual for us, and later our team of Achievers to review and revise our vision (and values) and then set that year's strategies, goals, plans, and budgets. In 1983, we collaborated with Tom Peters' to develop "Toward Excellence" an executive action planning process. We went on to help hundreds of management teams (some much more successfully then others) in many countries establish their vision, values, and purpose and then put together implementation strategies and build the leadership skills that brought it all to life. These rich experiences showed that a powerful team or organization vision:• creates organizational energy and enthusiasm for change and improvement.• provides an overarching "big picture" direction, focus, and passion to strategies, budgets, plans, systems, processes, and technological change.• focuses and builds teams much more effectively than wilderness experiences, simulations, or group exercises• counterbalances the pain, suffering, and helplessness that downsizing, disaster, or other such depressing activities usually bring.• vaccinates people against the Victimitis Virus and Pessimism Plague by giving them a sense of hopefulness and self-determination.• sets up a "magnetic force" that will attract the people and "lucky breaks" needed to move toward the vision.• repels those people who don't want to be any part of Clearly, the writer is the first function to staff internally, the graphic artist is a distant second, and the copy editor is third. It is unclear whether most companies ever benefit from staffing production specialists internally, because so little of their time is required on any given project. Now let’s examine the annual cost of an employee writer vs. a contract writer, using the previous scenario. The contract writer will be working for 42 weeks (three 14-week projects), and the employee will be working for 52 weeks. (Remember, the figures we’re using here for the employee are fully loaded with benefits and overhead.) The chart below shows how the figures add up. Annual Cost of Employee vs. Contract Writer
So at 42 weeks of continuous work, the cost of hiring a writer becomes somewhat comparable to the cost of using a contract writer, assuming our sample scenario is typical. You should be absolutely sure that you have that critical 42 weeks of work lined up, though. If you hire a writer internally and the work flow falls significantly short of that break point, it can be very expensive. It is my experience that very large companies can support 300-plus technical writers, with a ratio of five or six artists and one editor to every 10 to 15 writers. Production work is often contracted out, even in the largest of firms. In companies where the flow of technical publications work is sporadic, the decision of whether to staff internally or to outsource is a bit more difficult. All too often, an erratic publication cycle keeps one or two writers busy with work enough for three or four writers––but only for a few months at a time. Between cycles, the employee writers have little to do and find themselves assigned to product teams doing busywork. The best solution is to determine the minimum staffing required to meet the company’s average needs, then fill in during peak times with outsourcing. Careful analysis of how that outsourced time is deployed, and by which functions, will help you determine when to hire additional staff. For example, when a company has one writer in-house full-time but also uses two contract writers, each of whom spends 50% to 75% of his or her time on that company’s work for the period of a year, it is probably time to bring in another staff writer (assuming that the work load is stable or growing). Contract writers can be used to fill in if the company is on a fast growth curve, until the need for another full-time writer is evident. Outsourcing Scenarios: Beyond the Numbers There are scenarios where cost alone is not the most important factor. For instance, a compelling reason to choose outsourcing rather than hiring is expertise. Occasionally, a company will develop a product that requires a writer with specialized knowledge and experience. The specialized writer (who can charge a premium for his or her expertise) is needed for the technical documents supporting that one product or product line, but the writer is not needed for the company’s mainstream product lines. In this instance, outsourcing is the only cost-effective answer. Another scenario in which outsourcing makes more sense than staffing came up with an Oak Hill client. This start-up company has a complex and unique technology. Management quickly came to the conclusion that staffing a technical publications department would require writers who were not only senior, but who had advanced education in the field of optical networking. In short, in-house staffing would be prohibitively expensive, particularly because the company’s flow of publications work was predicted to be intense for the first three years, then drop off sharply. As a result, this company contracted out all its technical publications work and saved $1.5 million dollars during its first three years of publications development. Hire the Right Person for the Right Job Some start-ups make the mistake of thinking that if they hire a writer, the writer can do it all––write, edit, create production templates and maybe even do the illustrations, because, “It’s all done on computers.” This overlooks the fact that writers are trained to write. They are not trained in graphics. It’s never a good idea to have a writer edit his or her own work. Editing is a specialty unto itself and requires an objectivity that writers cannot have when reviewing their own work. And having a highly trained and highly paid writer do production work that could be done much more cost-effectively (and better) by someone who is paid at a lower rate doesn’t make sense. Hiring a trained writer may make sense for a start-up (depending on work load), but only if that writer can be supported by outsourcing the other functions. (See the analysis above of the percent of time each function spends on a given technical documentation project.) A Good Agency Makes Outsourcing Easy After the decision to outsource is made, the next challenge is to find the right resources––something easier said than done. It takes time to locate, interview, hire and train qualified contract workers. Getting each contractor on your company’s “Approved Vendor” list also takes time. It’s also true that technical publications is a critical function, and it isn’t easy to cede control over it to an outsider. The temptation to maintain close control over the work often overcomes the purely financial argument. It’s crucial to find a technical publications provider that can work closely as a partner. Partnering with a good provider rather than just contracting with a vendor can make all the difference. It relieves a lot of pressure when your technical publications provider operates as part of your department, can be relied upon to solve problems, and puts the right resources on the job when they’re needed. There are a number of advantages to using a contract agency, in addition to the cost savings. Benefits include: • One-stop shopping. Agencies have a depth of resources that includes writers, artists, web designers, production specialists and more. Agencies can tap these resources quickly to find the people with the exact qualifications you need. • Speed staffing. Contracting with one individual at a time is simply not an option for many companies. There is too much time and paperwork involved in locating the right people and getting them approved as vendors. An approved agency can place workers without going through a lot of bureaucratic spaghetti. And a good agency will assure that the contractors are screened and qualified. • Insurance. If you contract with an individual who doesn’t
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