Carla Sarti is a business leader with over 20+ years of experience in the market space. She has been a reputed board member of organizations like Kettering University and Rhonda Walker Foundation and is currently the VP of GBS at Lear corporation.
Founder & CEO of HighRadius, a fintech enterprise SaaS leader that provides
Autonomous Software for Order to Cash, Treasury & Record to Report. Sashi’s leadership has
secured the trust of 200+ Global 2000 companies.
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Dead-or-Alive Question #1: In 10 years, do you think BPOs for outsourcing will
be dead or alive?
The BPOs might benefit from a traditional low-cost BPO model for companies that still haven’t moved into centralization.
But others need a transformational model, and my clients looked at that 15 years ago when I was outsourcing.
That’s how they are selling that they’re transformational partners.
It will be up to the results and whether they can truly transform a company or not, and that will dictate whether they’re still around.
Dead-or-Alive Question #2: In 10 years, will large, centralized service centers
be dead or alive? Especially given the Covid effect of Work From Anywhere?
Proactive information that can drive business results is precisely where in 10 years, companies have to invest in technology to leverage the most significant future power.
You’ve got to be able to have one source of data that has captured everything to use AI to its total capability.
We are in that foundation-building stuff right now, looking to invest a couple of years in AI.
Dead-or-Alive Question #5: In 10 years, given the consistent wage inflation,
will India be a top choice for service centers?
Honestly, India as a primary service center location would be dead already.
Inflation attrition has been an issue since, and in 10 years, India as a significant service Center will be tied to how well the BPOs for outsourcing have done.
India will remain an excellent hub for finding talented workers.
The population is highly educated and analytical, so I think it’ll still be a location to find great people.
Dead-or-Alive Question #6: Would GBS be dead or alive as an organization?
Companies that have made the initial investment in centralization and some technology to help standardize have already seen the tip of the iceberg payback.
Those companies will continue to drive innovation and value by utilizing the GBS organization.
With so much M&A activity and competition, at least in the automotive industry, companies need to ensure that they have the best cost structure.
They should be able to move nimbly based on market conditions and integrate acquisitions fast without GBS.
Fortune 500 companies are at a significant disadvantage.
Companies that haven’t gone down this path may find themselves unable to respond as fast as competition to market conditions.
They might not have the correct data to make company-wide decisions and will either decide to move to GBS, or maybe they won’t be around in 10 years.
Carla Sarti’s advice to you: Most of the workforce leaves colleges and they get recruited by companies like Accenture, PwC and you went from them to becoming a GBS leader. What is your career advice for peers both in consulting and management?