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Finance & Accounting Outsourcing: Does Outsourcing Reduce Risk?
When enterprises look to outsource in-house responsibilities, finance and accounting functions are usually not the first ones farmed out. Executives might expect to read headlines like, “Aon Negotiating to Outsource Most of its U.S. IT Infrastructure to Computer Sciences Corporation,” a development Aon and CSC touted in a 2004 press release. Sophisticated business process outsourcing (“BPO”) such as finance and accounting is not as widespread as IT outsourcing.
As enterprise firms seek to enhance their competitive advantage and minimize risks in the Sarbanes-Oxley environment, more and more businesses are looking to outsource parts of their finance and accounting functions. Determination of the right fit with a service provider and the right mix of services is essential.
This article addresses some key business and legal issues in whether F&A outsourcing reduces risks.
Not all F&A functions are created equal. Each F&A function has its own risk profile and potential suitability for outsourcing. Risk profiles reflect the nature of the business functions, size and character of the enterprise, since publicly trade companies must deal with the vagaries and criminalization of accounting practices under Sarbanes-Oxley, and other considerations.
Transactional vs. Judgmental Operations.
Transactional functions, especially payroll and accounts payable and receivable, are the most commonly outsourced functions. Financial reporting and more advanced functions can also be outsourced, though the more interaction required for a function—say, for instance, budgeting—the less likely it is to be outsourced. But today, F&A outsourcers are taking on responsibilities once executed by entire in-house F&A departments.
Enterprise Maturity.
F&A outsourcing depends on enterprise maturity.
Public Companies and “Wannabe’s.”
Mature enterprises — public companies and those considering going public — must, or will have to, establish and certify, on a quarterly basis, the adequacy of their accounting reporting and control systems. Compliance with the Sarbanes-Oxley Act has generated new software and service offerings by information technology service providers and consultants. Such technology might be maintained in-house, a hosting service provider or by a managing service provider.
For public companies, the challenge is to identify those F&A functions that can be “safely” outsourced with minimal risk that a failure will result in civil or criminal liability for the CEO and the CFO. Once such “safe” functions have been identified, the lawyers can deal with “reasonable” allocations of risk between the service provider and the enterprise.
Startups and Emerging Companies.
Startups may outsource more of a function. Outsourcing helps startups avoid misestimating their own needs. Two scenarios are common among startups: they underestimate their F&A needs, or they overestimate them.
Startups will often hire a bookkeeper, for instance, and may get the basic transactional aspects of the business right. But without an accountant, they can’t optimize their F&A strategy. This mistake can often require a startup to sink far more capital in F&A and litigation down the road than they would have had to invest up front.
Alternatively, some firms will bring on a CFO or Comptroller when their F&A needs do not demand that those positions be filled by a full-time employee.
Governance Considerations.
Entire F&A departments can be outsourced, all the way up to the CFO level. We interviewed two F&A outsourcing firms on the desirability of outsourcing CFO and Comptroller functions. Ephinay will take over all F&A responsibilities from a customer except CFO and Comptroller, which Ephinay believes must be retained by the customer for governance purposes. Other outsourcers, like Geller & Co., are more willing to absorb even the responsibilities of CFO and Comptroller, eliminating the need for any F&A functions to be retained by the customer. In contrast, Ephinay believes that is rarely optimal except when the customer’s business is highly specialized. Perhaps the distinction is not so important for small business, but for larger and growing businesses, retention of key internal executives helps ensure controls are retained as well.
Business Process Analysis.
As in all other types of outsourcing, F&A outsourcing starts with an analysis of the business processes of an enterprise. This analysis must cover virtually all essential elements of the business processes under consideration. Thus, an “end-to-end” approach will identify functionality, interaction with third parties (such as suppliers, customers and regulators), the degree of human expertise required for each process and the degree to which human expertise can be captured in a scalable information technology solution that includes hardware, software, telecommunications and technology managers.
Business Processes Considered for F&A Outsourcing.
Having dissected the business processes from end-to-end, the enterprise then considers how the classic types of rationales for outsourcing might fit into each F&A process. Many firms find outsourcing F&A business process functions preferable to retaining them. Here are some common reasons why.
Shifting functions plays to core competencies.
F&A outsourcers exist for one reason and one reason alone: to take over the F&A functions of other businesses. If F&A outsourcers fail to do a good job of F&A in a competitive marketplace, they will fail entirely. F&A is an F&A outsourcing firm’s core competency, by definition. Of course, this is an agreement to “trust me.”)
In-house functions are always secondary to the fundamental premise of the company.
In a semiconductor business, for example, making and selling semiconductors is the lifeblood of the business; F&A functions are necessarily secondary because they do not create business. This is no less true of large corporations than it is of startups or enterprise businesses. Top talent is routed to revenue-generating departments; being an accounting whiz, for example, is unlikely to take you to the top of GM. F&A outsourcers, unlike their customers and prospective customers, are structured to reward those who perform F&A functions well.
F&A outsourcing optimizes functions of non-F&A businesses.
F&A outsourcers allow businesses to focus on revenue generation instead of worrying about F&A matters, which are integral to their operations but do not actually create revenue for their business.
Outsourcing optimizes the function of the CFO and other senior-level employees.
When transactional functions are outsourced, the CFO can focus on F&A strategy rather than minutiae. The CFO can be a CFO, the Comptroller can be a Comptroller.
Cost Substitution.
Outsourcing enables businesses to implement more advanced technology solutions more cheaply. Take, for example, a firm with an antiquated IT system that costs them $10 million dollars a year to run. They want to upgrade, but the upgrade will require a capital investment of $15 million; the outsourcer, on the other hand, can provide the service for $8 million. The customer may prefer to go with the outsourcer, who can provide the improved technology for less than the cost of the customer’s obsolete technology and for substantially less than the cost of an in-house upgrade.
Economies of scale.
F&A service providers such as Ephinay and Geller claim they can give the customer “more F&A bang for the buck.” An outsourcing provider (or a CPA firm) could enable a company outsource its needs to F&A experts who work part-time for the company. When ’re hiring a part-time F&A provider, the enterprise can afford to tap a deeper bench for the same money. For the same costs as for a CFO, the enterprise might get a CFO, a Comptroller, and a bookkeeper. The customer can take advantage of the fact that the outsourcer likely has a much larger and more specialized staff than the customer’s in-house F&A department. A customer could afford to have a small army of outsourced accountants, for example, working on its projects at crucial times, which it could never do in-house.
Peaks and Valleys.
Outsourcing may also help smooth peaks and valleys in the monthly, quarterly and annual financial and accounting cycles. Variability in service volumes enables companies to budget for their in-house baselines and manage the pricing and costs — on a variable pricing method — of outsourced staffing for peak loads. In contrast to staff augmentation as a business model, though, outsourcing involves minimum purchase commitments by the enterprise customer, thereby allowing an efficient outsourcer to engage in resource management planning and delivery of lower per-unit resource costs.
Process Complexity.
Certain F&A processes are so inherently complex, or judgmental, that the entire process is outsourced before the enterprise even considers hiring and supporting its own staff. Such areas include employee retirement planning, ERISA fund investment and pension administration. (These processes overlap with HR functions, making them even more complex.)
Outsourcing in F&A is often a way to increase competitiveness and minimize a firm’s risk. Outsourcing can improve competitiveness by cutting costs, but it can also improve the capabilities of the customer’s firm beyond freeing up intellectual and financial capital. Here’s what the sales pitch sounds like:
The prospective customer is considering handing over his business’ finances to another business. That is an inherently delicate process, especially if the prospective customer is not already acquainted with the outsourcer. Customers expect answers to the following questions:
In outsourcing arrangements as in any transaction, friction points arise particularly when responsibilities are poorly defined. As in other types of outsourcing, F&A outsourcing involves classic issues that need resolution in planning and contracting.
A business’ decision about whether to outsource any function, F&A or otherwise, often hinges on the cost of transitioning responsibilities to the outsourcer. The slope of the customer’s learning curve and the amount of time required to make the transition depends on the number and importance of the outsourced functions. It also depends on the particular outsourcing firm.
Timing.
Some firms require four to six weeks to take over bookkeeping responsibilities from their customers; others do it in as little as two weeks. Outsourcing a whole F&A department could take as long as a year, or as little as a month
Transition Planning Toolkit.
Firms will often require their customers to fill out a questionnaire detailing business expenses to help acquaint the outsourcer with the customer’s regular expenses. This helps accelerate the transition. However, some pain occurs when the enterprise of the customer has to modify its process to accommodate the new outsourced business process.
Comparison with In-sourcing.
Some F&A outsourcers assert that transition costs entailed in a switch to outsourcing are not necessarily higher than those of hiring a new person in-house, and can often be recouped much more quickly. However, in a larger organization, the degree of change management is much greater when transitioning to an outsourced process.
F&A outsourcing contracts may still represent a small minority of total outsourcing arrangements. Yet businesses are increasingly looking to F&A outsourcers to take over certain high volume, low risk, F&A functions with a modest degree of discretion or judgment. The trend in outsourcing towards allowing smaller and smaller businesses to outsource has taken hold in the F&A area as well. Small and mid-sized businesses (“SMB’s”) and startups can often find it profitable to outsource a variety of different F&A functions that would only have been profitable for major corporations to do just a few years ago. F&A outsourcing is becoming increasingly common among businesses that want to reduce risk and optimize their competitiveness and are willing to invest in strategic sourcing plans and skilled contract lawyers.
Effective risk management requires effective legal contracting. Given to complexity of F&A outsourcing, careful contracting is required.
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