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A Service Performance Insight White Paper
Service Compass: Charting the Course to Professional Service Excellence
Five Steps to Build a Successful Services Business Plan
December 2012
Sponsored by
Service Performance Insight
6260 Winter Hazel Drive 25 Boroughwood Place Liberty Township, OH 45044 USA Hillsborough, CA 94010 USA
Telephone: 513.759.5443 Telephone: 650.342.4690
David.Hofferberth@SPIresearch.com Jeanne.Urich@SPIresearch.com
www.SPIresearch.com
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction .................................................................................................................................... 1
Symptoms of Misalignment .......................................................................................................... 1
Five Steps for Successful PS Business Planning ...................................................................... 2
Step 1 – Build a shared vision of success .................................................................................. 2
Step 2 – Assess organizational strengths and weaknesses ...................................................... 4
Step 3 – Expose Key themes and disconnects .......................................................................... 6
Step 4 – Confront reality ............................................................................................................. 7
Step 5 – Build initiatives ............................................................................................................. 9
Tools can help with the planning process ................................................................................ 10
Information enables accurate business planning .................................................................... 11
Quantify Improvement to Drive Change .................................................................................... 13
Conclusions ................................................................................................................................. 14
About Service Performance Insight .................................................................................... 15
FIGURES
Figure 1: Service Planning Pyramid ............................................................................................... 3
Figure 2: SWOT Analysis ............................................................................................................... 5
Figure 3: Expose Key Themes and Disconnects ........................................................................... 7
Figure 4: Subjective and Objective Insights ................................................................................... 8
Figure 5: Create a fact-based appraisal leading to break-through improvement priorities .......... 10
Figure 6: Use tools to organize, strategize and prioritize ............................................................. 10
Figure 7: Integrated Information-driven Business Planning ......................................................... 11
TABLES
Table 1: Integration Helps Drive Performance ............................................................................. 12
Table 2: Translate Key Initiatives into the Financial Plan ............................................................. 13
Service Compass Five Steps to Build a Successful Services Business Plan
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INTRODUCTION
For many professional service organizations annual planning has become
an empty ritual. Firms often waste too much time and energy reliving
past failures instead of exploring new avenues for growth. Done right,
instead of a necessary evil, business planning can open up fresh new
ideas and facilitate playing to strengths rather than shoring up
weaknesses. The best of the best PSOs each year find new and better
ways to do the things they love to do…. and are especially good
at….while minimizing the hassles and tedium of doing the things that
hold them back or waste precious time and resources.
Each year PS organizations should devote time to reenergizing their
vision and strategies as they plan the upcoming year’s business. The
annual business planning process can be a valuable catalyst for growth
and profit. At least annually, plan to get leadership aligned by
reevaluating and improving go to market and sales strategies; discuss
new and better ways to motivate the workforce and streamline processes
and systems. In the ever more crowded professional service market,
creating, maintaining and enhancing competitive differentiation is a
business imperative. Without new and differentiating knowledge, skills,
intellectual property and supporting systems and tools, all too many
firms find themselves slipping towards staff augmentation with
commoditized skills and rates as they watch fresh, young challengers
seize hot new markets with in-demand competencies.
This White Paper identifies five critical steps PSOs should take on an
annual basis to prepare for what lies ahead.
SYMPTOMS OF MISALIGNMENT
Before embarking on an annual planning exercise, SPI Research has
explored some of the reasons why PSOs fail to deliver their desired
results. Our experience has shown that when things go wrong, it most
often starts at the top and then cascades downward throughout the
organization, ultimately showing up in lackluster financial performance.
Eliminating the root causes of dysfunction and inefficiency goes a long
way toward driving organizational success. Common issues:
Unclear strategy – lack of clarity around target markets, target
clients and why we win. Inability to capitalize on market
opportunities due to lack of alignment, lack of employee
engagement or leadership and cultural issues. No leverage to
drive repeat sales, limited competitive differentiation, poor sales
and marketing execution.
Murky service charter – particularly a problem for embedded
PSOs – with conflict between driving financial PS revenue and
margin versus helping the overall company achieve its objectives
of market expansion and client delight.
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Silos – exist in all companies – they usually occur in the choppy
waters between groups or functions where responsibility and
accountability are blurry. A classic example… who is
responsible for driving new service revenues – is it sales or
delivery? How can disconnected processes and poor handoffs be
improved?
Skills imbalance - the logical extension of organizational silos…
where all parties are not aligned … not selling what we can
deliver or not being able to deliver what has been sold. Not
enough or too many people with the right skills, excessive non-
billable headcount, sub-par utilization, revenue per person,
difficulty in recruiting, ramping, retaining, inability to quickly,
easily staff projects.
Immature processes - disparate or poor systems and tools.
Inconsistent project methods; lack of tools and intellectual
property leading to low repeatability and inability to drive
efficiency and reuse.
Poor quality and customer satisfaction – Failed projects, cost
overruns, difficulty securing references. No quality review
processes and/or poor project visibility into budget to actuals.
Poor financial performance – Revenue and margin below
targets, poor forecasting accuracy, unpredictability and high
levels of risk.
FIVE STEPS FOR SUCCESSFUL PS BUSINESS PLANNING
The annual planning process — regardless of the agenda, framework or
method subscribed — is not only essential for running the business, but
is also an opportunity for reflection and a powerful catalyst for change. If
an executive team is failing at execution, the root cause resides in
conversations not had, topics not addressed and, subsequently, actions
not taken. Failing to execute is the symptom; diagnosis is key to solving
the problem.
Effective planning relies on both quantitative and qualitative
information. It is critical PS executives don't just consider the annual
business plan as a financial exercise, as key improvement or expansion
initiatives can have implications far beyond the income statement.
Step 1 – Build a shared vision of success
Business planning is hard to do, but is well worth the effort. Many PSOs
use an outside facilitator to ensure key points of view are heard and
incorporated. They annually refocus and reenergize the business for
many reasons beyond financial planning. Overarching objectives may
include:
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Accelerate revenue and margin growth either through mergers
and acquisitions or internal process improvements;
Drive alignment between the service organization and other
departments, or improve internal service organization alignment;
Assimilate new groups, companies or functions;
Capitalize on new markets and create new solution offers;
Implement new systems and processes to improve effectiveness
and efficiency;
Improve quality and client satisfaction; and
Optimize sales and marketing effectiveness.
The first step is to build a shared vision of success. It might sound easy,
but it is a critical component of beginning the year with a clear and
concise view of where you want to go (Figure 1). A vision statement
outlines what a company wants to be. It concentrates on the future; it is a
source of inspiration and provides a clear picture of the future. It sets the
direction for business planning.
For instance, Google’s vision "Organize the world's information and
make it universally accessible and useful” is clear, compelling,
inspirational….and… actionable.
Figure 1: Service Planning Pyramid
Source: Service Performance Insight, December 2012
Next is a Mission statement, which tells how the organization will
achieve its vision. It concentrates on the present; it defines customers
and critical processes, and it informs everyone about the desired level of
performance.
What business the company is in and who are the primary
"clients"
What is the responsibility of the organization toward these
"clients"
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What are the main objectives which support the company in
accomplishing its mission
For instance, Ben and Jerry’s mission "To make, distribute and
sell the finest quality all nature ice cream and euphoric
concoctions with a continued commitment to incorporating
wholesome, natural ingredients and promoting business practices
that respect the earth and the environment” says it all.
Next is Values and Culture – how we conduct business here. It is the set
of unwritten rules for decision-making and power. Behavior – the
intrinsic values that define “who we are,” “what we do,” and “how we
act.” Establishing core values is an extremely important component of
the service business plan as they describe the attitudes and behaviors the
organization prizes. Consider having the team pick key individuals who
best exemplify cultural values – write their stories and core values will
emerge. If you can’t think of a story that exemplifies a core value… it
probably isn’t one.
Then there is the Charter. Charter defines the scope, objectives and
participants in a project. It provides a preliminary delineation of roles
and responsibilities, outlines the business plan objectives, identifies the
main stakeholders, and defines team or functional authority. The charter
describes the role, function and boundaries for functional organizations.
And finally, the business model, which provides greater detail into the
specific markets, clients and service portfolio.
Should we have a direct or indirect sales model?
Should we have different programs and teams by industry,
geography or account?
Should we have horizontal or vertical centers of competency?
Are we centrally or de-centrally managed?
The business model describes the way the PSO is organized and how it
will address:
Key markets – and key clients
Contribution – what products or services do we provide?
Distinction – what makes our product or service unique, why
clients choose us
The annual business plan is built as a pyramid for a reason – the only
way to galvanize the entire organization is to attach to a bright and
compelling future (the vision), and each of the activities rely on each
other and cascade in order to build alignment and focus throughout the
organization.
Step 2 – Assess organizational strengths and weaknesses
The second step is to conduct a SWOT analysis. It stands for Strengths,
Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats. A SWOT analysis guides the
PSO to identify the positives and negatives inside the organization
(strengths and weaknesses), and outside of it, (opportunities and threats).
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Developing a shared view of the current situation is the first step to
alignment, change and improvement.
Figure 2: SWOT Analysis
Source: Service Performance Insight, December 2012
First, assess the organization's strengths.
What services are we best known for?
Who are our best employees and clients?
What do we do best?
What do employees and clients like most about our firm?
It might be the PSO has a unique life/work balance – enabling it to take
advantage of skilled consultants at the top of their craft while
accommodating flexible work schedules. But this core strength may also
show up as a weakness due to difficulty in scheduling or inability to
focus part-time workers on incremental business development activities.
Explore how to accentuate the strengths while eliminating or overcoming
the weaknesses.
Second, assess the organization's weaknesses.
What are some things we don't do well and how might we turn
them into a strength? Or eliminate them as a weakness?
For instance, the PSO might have clients that desire global service
delivery but today it can only deliver locally. Therefore, a major
initiative might be to expand globally, either organically, through
acquisitions or through new partnerships. Determine where change is
possible. If the organization is at a juncture or turning point, an
inventory of strengths and weaknesses can reveal priorities and
possibilities.
Now focus on the external environment, assess untapped opportunities in
the market.
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What does the market need or how is it changing, and how can
prepare for it?
What are hot new growth services that require minimal training
but can be sold at a high profit margin?
Adjust and refine plans mid-course. A new opportunity might open
wider avenues, while a new threat could close a path that once existed.
And finally, assess external threats.
Are new competitors emerging that could cause disruption and
compromise profit?
Are there new regulations on the horizon, which will cause
increased regulatory costs or eliminate lines of work altogether?
Focus on strengths and opportunities, while shoring up or eliminating
weaknesses and threats that could derail your efforts.
Remember, the purpose of performing a SWOT is to reveal positive
forces that work together and potential problems that need to be
addressed or at least recognized. Executives can list internal and external
opposites side by side. Ask clients to answer these simple questions:
what are the strengths and weaknesses of our firm, or effort, and what are
the opportunities and threats facing it?
Executives should use fact-based information, which probably comes
from core business solutions (ERP, CRM, PSA, etc.), to assess strengths,
weaknesses, opportunities and threats. Take advantage of this
information because it is specific to the PSO and can yield significant
insight into the future.
Step 3 – Expose Key themes and disconnects
In step three expose key themes and disconnects, which while important
to all types of organizations, are particularly critical for embedded
service organizations, where charter conflict is rampant. SPI Research
often sees PSOs where the financial model is at odds with what the
executive team really wants and needs from the professional services
organization.
In many instances there may be incompatible points of view regarding
what the PSO should or should not be. Balancing profit, client delight,
sales enablement and market growth requires give and take. Tipping the
scale too far in favor of profit undermines client delight, sales
enablement and market growth, while tipping too far towards sales
enablement and market growth may compromise client delight and
profit. Use the planning process as a catalyst to expose and rationalize
these disconnects. The answer may be to set up an internal bank of non-
billable hours dedicated to sales enablement, market growth or client
delight.
It is critical in this step to uncover divergent points of view to arrive at
the best possible course which supports the overall vision. SPI Research
finds that some of the greatest debates occur here. Every executive has
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his or her own opinion, and they are all important but the team must
understand and rationalize competing priorities.
Figure 3: Expose Key Themes and Disconnects
Source: Service Performance Insight, December 2012
In many cases there is a root cause for the lack of alignment. Many
professional services organizations have a number of different charters,
each of which impact the financial plan. For instance, one might be
ensuring client satisfaction and references, or focusing on driving repeat
business and referrals. Executives should ask, “Do all of our clients need
to be wildly satisfied or primarily our most important ones?” The second
might be to achieve revenue and profit targets, where the PSO is
primarily focused on efficiency, which may compromise effectiveness.
In many cases, this might be a short term charter to improve the financial
position, but could come at the expense of client satisfaction and long-
term growth. If market growth is a primary focus, expansion could come
at the expense of revenue and profitability.
The plans made a year ago were very important at the time. But going
forward these charter priorities should be reevaluated. Decisions must be
made not only for the next year, but for years to come. Part of the plan
must include how to get there.
Step 4 – Confront reality
Planning does not need to be a necessary evil – it can be the most
important and empowering tool in a PSO’s arsenal to get the entire
organization on the same page – to achieve truly great things. Effective
planning creates a safe, fact-based, and reality-based environment where
new ideas can flourish.
Figure 4 shows an example of the process SPI Research uses to help
clients gain both quantitative and qualitative insight into their current
reality.
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Figure 4: Subjective and Objective Insights
Source: Service Performance Insight, December 2012
SPI Research believes there are two realities, first is objective
performance; how a PSO compares to industry peers from a quantitative
standpoint, which shows potential areas for improvement. It is at this
point where executives should draw information from their information
systems to compare to industry benchmarks - showing where the
organization excels and where it is falling behind. Numbers don’t lie and
executives should use this information to compare and contrast their
organization to others.
For instance, executives might be satisfied with a lower billable
utilization rate than their peers, as they might invest in service
productization. This investment overtime will show up in higher bill
rates and revenues but may represent incremental cost in the short term.
There are many avenues to success, quantitative benchmarks expose the
possibilities.
The second reality is the subjective reality. The subjective reality can
make or break a PSO’s business plan. Is everyone on the same page?
Are there unconscious saboteurs – if so, it’s probably because folks have
not had the opportunity, in a safe environment, to give their opinions.
Here PS executives need to identify the real change agents, those who
are dissatisfied with the current reality, who see a brighter future, and
more importantly are willing to do something about it. There are also
detractors, who just say no, but they may have a very good reason. They
may feel these new initiatives have been tried before and failed, or
perhaps there is just too much on the plate and this too will pass as
another “planning exercise du jour.”
Both realities must become one to achieve any type of lasting change.
Both the agents of change and detractors care about the future of the
organization, and it is important their opinions are heard and respected.
In the end, both sides must be aligned for any type of lasting
improvement. The team must leave the planning session with an
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acknowledgment the PSO has decided on a specific direction, regardless
of whether or not they completely agree. This acknowledgment will be
shared with all others in the organization; it is important everyone sings
from the same hymnal.
Then, executives must focus on the highest impact initiatives for
improvement to create an actionable business plan.
Step 5 – Build initiatives
The final step is to create the initiatives that will propel the organization
into the new year and beyond. By now the executive team should have
galvanized the planning team around a shared view of the future, and its
priorities. Now is the time to take action – with realistic success
measures and clear roles, responsibilities and timelines. The team that
ends up with a laundry list of 15 to 20 key priorities is doomed to failure
before it starts.
When too many initiatives are proposed, very few are fully enacted, and
this failure eventually stalls the PSO’s growth and profitability plans.
All of those competing priorities with no real owners or investment
demoralize and disenfranchise both the leadership team and everyone
else throughout the organization. In order to drive the plan forward there
are several areas to avoid, each of which could hurt the planning process.
First is the absence of executive alignment and leadership, due to
initiatives being viewed as only tactical;
No market, benchmark or customer fact-based data to
substantiate decisions on priorities or to describe the rationale
behind the changes;
Lack of meaningful engagement of business operations and
employees until it is too late for them to have input, investment
or engagement in the process; and,
Poor or no sustained communication regarding Why? Why now?
What is in it for me? To build support and participation
throughout the organization;
No ongoing process for communication and follow-through,
resulting in lack of sustained focus and commitment.
To be successful SPI Research recommends no more than five, and
preferably three key annual initiatives. Typically, these overarching key
initiatives address action areas such as business development and sales
growth; employee enablement or financial improvement. PSOs are great
at driving client projects – so develop clear “big rock” improvement
priorities with assigned owners, teams and project plans. Cascade
initiative participation throughout the organization to include your best
and brightest change captains from around the world. Above all else,
clear, frequent communication is a critical success factor. Communicate
what happened in the planning sessions; let employees see and
understand the organization’s vision; help them internalize strengths and
opportunities while acknowledging weaknesses and threats.
Service Compass Five Steps to Build a Successful Services Business Plan
Service Performance Insight Page 10
Figure 5: Create a fact-based appraisal leading to break-through improvement priorities
Source: Service Performance Insight, December 2012
TOOLS CAN HELP WITH THE PLANNING PROCESS
First, there should be a top line initiative which is a short statement
explaining the primary objective (Figure 6). Next, the area of focus
breaks the initiative into core components. For each area of focus there
must be success metrics to show whether or not the PSO has succeeded.
Ideally, these metrics are quantitative and not subjective, and can be
measured using the organization’s information infrastructure.
Figure 6: Use tools to organize, strategize and prioritize
Source: Service Performance Insight, December 2012
Service Compass Five Steps to Build a Successful Services Business Plan
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Each of these success metrics requires some type of action. Finally there
should be a timeline as well as an executive owner, who is not
necessarily responsible for every action, but must work with others in a
collaborative fashion to accomplish the goals.
INFORMATION ENABLES ACCURATE BUSINESS PLANNING
The annual rite of business planning begins with an analysis of the past
year of data. This information provides a base upon which to build the
upcoming year’s plan. Obviously, utilizing the organization’s internal
business systems to obtain data streamlines the planning process.
Almost every professional service organization with more than 10
employees uses some type of financial management solution (Enterprise
Resource Planning, or ERP). ERP enables PS executives to analyze
critical key performance measurements to determine areas of success, as
well as areas requiring improvement. There are other important solutions
PSOs should leverage in the planning process. They include Client
Relationship Management (CRM) and Professional Services Automation
(PSA). Both CRM and PSA provide the information necessary to show
revenue and profitability by the types of services sold, geographic
regions, clients, employees and practice areas.
Ideally, the information infrastructure is integrated so information can
seamlessly be passed from one system, for instance, from CRM to the
HCM solution to show services sold, which helps with staffing
requirements, from HCM to PSA to better understand the skills required,
resource workload and their cost, to identify gaps where skills are not
available, from PSA to ERP to provide project profitability and then back
from ERP and CRM to show which services and clients are the most
profitable and therefore should be accentuated.
Figure 7: Integrated Information-driven Business Planning
Source: Service Performance Insight, December 2012
Integration improves visibility into core professional services assets —
the people, processes and capital used to complete work. SPI Research
believes that comprehensive real-time visibility is only attained through
application integration. In other words, information seamlessly flows
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Service Performance Insight Page 12
across different departments and functions, so that executives and other
critical employees have a more complete picture of operations, and
therefore can make better decisions as part of the annual business plan,
while updating them as conditions change over the course of a year.
To demonstrate the value of departmental solution integration with the
core financial management solution, SPI Research has provided key
service execution performance metrics (Table 1).
Table 1: Integration Helps Drive Performance
Key Performance Indicator (KPI)
Without PSA With Non-Integrated
PSA
With Integrated
PSA
Billable utilization 66.3% 71.3% 74.4%
Concurrent projects managed 4.46 4.54 5.22
On-time delivery 74.8% 76.8% 80.0%
Annual revenue per billable consultant
$183K $206K $225K
Source: Service Performance Insight, December 2012
Billable utilization is one of the main reasons PSOs purchase PSA. The
table shows PSOs not using a PSA solution averaged 66.3% utilization.
In other words, on a 2,000 hour basis they billed a little over 1,325 hours
annually. Those organizations purchasing PSA, but not integrating it
with the core financial solution improved billable utilization to over
71%, meaning over 1,420 billable hours per year, a gain of almost 100
hours over those organizations without PSA! For organizations utilizing
PSA with integration to the core financial management solution
utilization increased to almost 75% with almost 1,500 hours billed
annually – 80 additional hours of billable time over the course of a year!
These improvements directly translate into revenue and margin.
A similar comparison can be made based on the number of projects
concurrently managed by a project manager. The net effect of a project
manager using no PSA solution to a fully integrated PSA solution adds
up to one additional project managed concurrently, meaning less
overhead required to run projects. This overhead reduction helps
increase project margins which ultimately show up in overall
profitability.
On-time delivery is also a critical key performance measurement;
moving from no PSA to a fully integrated PSA solution increases on-
time delivery, which definitely improves both profitability and client
satisfaction, which ultimately leads to higher growth rates.
And finally, annual revenue per billable consultant soars $42K from
$183 to $225K for companies who deploy and integrate their PSA
application with other core business applications.
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The importance of this section is to note that besides increasing
productivity, integrated business solutions also provide visibility and
actionable performance improvement metrics.
QUANTIFY IMPROVEMENT TO DRIVE CHANGE
For this analysis, SPI Research created an example PSO, with
fundamentals similar to many organizations in the PS Maturity Model™
2012 Benchmark study. The following is just an example, but shows the
potential financial benefits from embarking on a PS improvement
initiatives.
For this example, SPI Research assumed the following:
∆ Number of PS employees: 130
∆ Number of Billable PS employees: 100
∆ Annual PS Billings: $24.5mm
∆ Billable utilization: 68.0%
∆ Average hourly bill rate: $180
While there are literally hundreds of potential improvements that PSOs
can make, SPI Research focused on a few key performance areas to
improve profit margins. Small improvements can yield significant
results. For instance, one goal might be to reduce new hire recruiting
and ramping time from 120 to 50 days.
Table 2: Translate Key Initiatives into the Financial Plan
Key Initiative Success Metrics Assumptions Financial
Employee Growth and Development
• Reduce recruiting and ramping time from 120 to 50 days
• 70 more potential billable days
• $180/hour bill rate • 68% utilization • 10 new employees
annually
$685,440
Improve Operations
• Implement new cloud-based PSA
• Improve utilization 2% (from 68% to 70%)
• 2,000 billable hours /year potential
• 100 billable employees • $180/hour average
billable rate
$720,000
Service Packaging
• 20% of projects sold as packages
• Improve project profit margins 30 to 40%
• Total revenue of $25M • $5M sold as packages
$500,000
Total $1,895,440
Source: Service Performance Insight, December 2012
In this example the organization aligned recruiting with the sales and
project pipeline to more efficiently find the right employees in addition
to creating and maintaining an extensive database of candidates, to
reduce the time to recruit. Once onboard the PSO focused on effective
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training and mentoring so new hires come up-to-speed in billable roles
faster. The upshot of this exercise results in 70 more billable days
annually. With 10 new employees this could add up to almost $700,000
in additional revenue annually (Table 2).
Likewise, if the PSO desires to improve operations it might consider the
implementation of a new Professional Services Automation (PSA)
solution. In this particular example SPI Research has shown a minimal
increase in billable utilization due to the implementation of PSA.
Normally, SPI Research sees a 5-8% increase in billable utilization when
PSOs implement PSA. Regardless, the net result of this conservative
estimate is over $700,000 in additional annual revenue.
And finally, one area very much in the spotlight right now is service
packaging, which helps PSOs more efficiently and effectively develop,
sell and execute services. This metric focuses on service margins, and as
shown in this example, the increases can be significant in terms of
overall financial benefits.
The purpose of this table is to demonstrate that in the PSO’s annual
business plan there are both operational and financial implications that
must be considered. A PSO’s annual business plan is not just a financial
plan; it is a plan that will help move the organization forward.
CONCLUSIONS
The end of the year can be very exciting for PSOs. It is time to reflect
back on the past year’s successes, as well as its failures, and visualize a
new clean canvas for the upcoming year. Done right, business planning
can be very enlightening and exhilarating. It is a chance to evaluate
future possibilities and to work together to eliminate issues which
dragged down performance.
In all organizations there are individuals who want to move forward
aggressively, as well as others who believe minor tweaks to the status
quo will suffice. Every team member has a point-of-view, and it is
important that everyone's point is heard, discussed, debated and resolved.
Following the five steps provides PSOs with a much better chance of
moving forward successfully. It is critical the executive team take
advantage of information resources to gain a quantitative insight into
performance, as well as listening to the opinions of team members to
gain a qualitative insight. Now is the time to make it happen!
Service Compass Five Steps to Build a Successful Services Business Plan
Service Performance Insight (SPI Research) is a global research, consulting and training organization dedicated to helping professional service organizations (PSOs) make quantum improvements in productivity and profit. In 2007, SPI developed the PS Maturity Model™ as a strategic planning and management framework. It is now the industry-leading performance improvement tool used by over 6,000 service and project-oriented organizations to chart their course to service excellence.
SPI provides a unique depth of operating experience combined with unsurpassed analytic capability. We not only diagnose areas for improvement but also provide the business value of change. We then work collaboratively with our clients to create new management processes to transform and ignite performance. Visit www.SPIresearch.com for more information on Service Performance Insight, LLC.
© 2012 Service Performance Insight Page 15
About Service Performance Insight
Jeanne Urich, Service Performance Insight Managing Director, is a renowned author, speaker and thought leader focused on the global service economy. She is a trusted advisor and transformative and operational change consultant to senior executives of leading services organizations, helping them navigate the journey from business-as-usual to business-as-exceptional.
Prior to co-founding Service Performance Insight she was a corporate officer and leader of the worldwide service organizations of Vignette, Blue Martini and Clarify, responsible for leading the growth of their professional services, education, account management and alliances organizations.
She is the co-author of the ground breaking Professional Service Maturity Model™ benchmark used by over 5,000 project-oriented organizations to diagnose and improve their performance. She is a featured speaker and author for major software solution providers and industry associations.
She has a Bachelor’s Degree (Magna Cum Laude and Phi Beta Kappa) in Math and Computer Science from Vanderbilt University. She is a contributing author of Tips from the Trenches: the Collective Wisdom of over 100 Professional Service Leaders. Contact Jeanne at jeanne.urich@spiresearch.com Phone (650) 342-4690.
R. David Hofferberth, PE, Service Performance Insight Managing Director, has over 25 years’ experience in information technology (IT) serving as an industry analyst, product director and consultant. Hofferberth’s research is focused on the services economy, and in particular, on white-collar productivity issues and the technologies that help people perform at their highest capacity.
Hofferberth’s background is extensive in services performance beginning in the early 1980s, where he conducted studies on white-collar productivity in the banking, technology, energy and construction sectors. In 1999 he introduced to the market the solution area now known as Professional Services Automation (PSA), when he published the seminal report: Professional Services Automation: Increasing Efficiencies and Profitability in Professional Services Organizations.
Prior to founding Service Performance Insight he was a Senior Director at Oracle and Aberdeen Group. Hofferberth earned an MBA from Duke University and a BS in Industrial Engineering from the University of Tennessee. He is also a licensed Professional Engineer (PE). Contact Dave at david.hofferberth@spiresearch.com Phone: (513) 759-5443.
Carey Bettencourt, Service Performance Insight Managing Director is a management consultant who specializes in improvement and transformation for project-driven professional service organizations. She is an experienced change management leader, expert in helping clients develop high performing teams that deliver increased utilization, profit and customer satisfaction. Carey also helps PS organizations identify, clarify, and create integrated communication, marketing, and product offerings that drive market differentiation and increased sales.
Carey has over 20 years domestic and international experience with leading software companies. She was a corporate officer and the senior vice president of the customer solutions organization at Accruent, the top-ranked professional services organization for three consecutive years according to the SPI Research Maturity benchmark. Carey was also a vice president at software firms ChannelPoint and Vroom Technologies responsible for professional services, education, support, strategic alliances, and hosting services. She previously held consulting practice, business development, and strategic alliance leadership roles at Oracle and J.D. Edwards.
Carey earned a Bachelor of Arts in Economics from UC Berkeley and an MBA from Pepperdine University. Contact carey.bettencourt@spiresearch.com
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