The professional services market is estimated to encompass upwards of $5 trillion annually and only shows signs of increasing as global enterprises continue to integrate project-based work into their overall scope of operations.
External services are often considered a linchpin to organizational success. Businesses frequently require specialized and unique support that necessitates the sourcing of a wide range of professionally delivered services and SOW-based labor, the vast majority of which are often purchased and managed situationally. Ardent Partners and Future of Work Exchange (FOWX) estimates that as little as 30% or less of business services spend is actually and actively accounted for in foundational enterprise planning, budgeting, and forecasting, which elicits two critical questions: 1) how can organizations possibly be confident that they are achieving the best value on this expenditure? and 2) why has it been so hard for MSP programs to gain traction in facilitating SOW-based services/labor when their infrastructure would seem to be so ideally adaptable to the underlying problem statement?
Those services procurement programs which are anchored in a bolder vision from the outset (beyond cost savings) are much more likely to be sustainably successful because they are designed from the point of view of the business and not through the narrower prism of a buy-to-pay lens. The services procurement paradigm of a decade ago, when MSPs started to see the revenue potential in this area, is long gone. Today’s services procurement paradigm needs to follow a much more progressive pattern, one that is founded on “how work gets done” rather than “how we can structure the sourcing activity to reduce the prices paid?”
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