There has been tremendous growth in the number and
size of multinational companies today, leading to significant
challenges in the areas of human resources and payroll.
With the increasing number of employees and office
locations, it has become more difficult to control internal processes
and establish communication between different parts of an organization.
According to Intercomp Global Services research, the number of
employees employed by the typical multinational company is 3,500. The
average multinational company has offices in seven countries.
Issues concerning human resources (HR) and payroll
can become true pain points for multinational companies, especially
when a firm's headcount is spread over 10 or more countries, with fewer
than 100 employees in each location. A global payroll system can help.
Implementing a global payroll system offers these
companies many advantages in terms of economies of scale, easy and
accurate reporting and general efficiency improvements that come along
with any centralization program of this nature. Moving from a
disaggregated, local-facing payroll structure to a single global system
can drive an organization toward a state of true globalization that
might not otherwise have been possible.
There are two main goals of a global payroll
system. First, it must help the company comply with local regulations.
In addition, the system must be able to ensure compliance with the
firm's global corporate policies, rules and regulations. If an
organization is to operate globally, executive management must be
assured that the firm is complying with all relevant requirements. This
means that the company must stay abreast of and comply with regulations
in multiple companies, but it must also make sure it is receiving
accurate and swift reports from various offices back to corporate
headquarters.
Organizations may choose to outsource the payroll
function or keep it in-house. In-house payroll enables companies to
comply with both local legislation and adhere to global corporate
policies. However, keeping the payroll function in-house can be
time-consuming and inefficient, especially in situations where
companies have few employees in some locations or where payroll is not
one of a company's core competencies. Hiring and managing a local
payroll specialist can be expensive and ineffective.
With an outsourcing option, companies can choose
to work with local service providers and manage the specialists
themselves, or work with a global payroll provider. Managing local
payroll providers in-house provides several benefits. These firms are
familiar with local tax and legal regulations and are likely to
complete payroll tasks correctly and on time. However, these firms may
not be as adept at meeting global corporate compliance. Local providers
are generally less familiar with corporate rules and regulations as an
in-house corporate payroll department might be. In addition, if a firm
hires a series of local payroll providers, each will provide
information in different formats and even in different languages,
making it virtually impossible to get any consistent multi-country
reports or information analysis, for instance.
If companies manage local providers on their own,
they still must control all the processes by themselves and dedicate
time and resources to this function. This is precisely what you are
trying to avoid.
At first look, a global payroll provider seems to
be a better solution. This provider is able to manage all
payroll-related questions, comply with local laws and meet global
corporate policies. However, many providers are not yet prepared to
provide truly seamless global payroll services. Global payroll
outsourcing is a relatively new business, and global payroll
outsourcing models are not always effective and reliable.
Solution
Payroll incorporates components of both human
resources and finance. From data-gathering to compiling, the payroll
process includes calculations and reporting as well as integrating the
data back into the organization.
Corporate compliance and legal compliance are two
separate areas. In general, HR policies can differ significantly from
one organization to the next. Complying with corporate rules and
regulations will impact payroll as a constraint and not as a driver –
specifically when calculating the gross but not necessarily the net.
There are often corporate compliance challenges, and there are often
differences in expectations between provider and client. Providers
cannot be responsible for corporate rules; they can merely take these
rules into account when applying them in any given local legislative
context.
Local compliance could be guaranteed by many
controls. Facing higher volumes as a core activity allows more easily
and systematically spotting compliance inconsistencies. A provider must
comply with client policies cross-country. Clients can set up strong
messages of integration internally. Providers are able to provide
better service and comply with policies in a better integrated and
systematic way with a one team/one location approach.
It is possible to achieve both regulatory
compliance and adhere to corporate rules and policies. However, the
main challenge is miscommunication between provider and company. The
comment from an HR manager from a multinational company underscores
this issue. "We do have compliance issues. And they mostly come down to
the communication between the provider and our company," he says.
A provider with a centralize team and processes,
one with strictly defined and highly effective processes, can help.
This provider must offer both high-quality services and effective
communication. An ideal model is a provider that offers services
through a shared service center. Shared service center includes payroll
specialists who are familiar with the different payroll-related rules
and regulations of that region. And having an entire team in a single
place makes it easier to control business processes and manage the
team. Shared service centers are widely used in many industries.
However, they are typically not widely used in the area of payroll
outsourcing. Few providers use this model for service delivery.
A series of local partners assures that the local
provider is up-to-date with all local legislative and regulatory
changes. The local partners' special team provides all legislative
updates to a service provider on a regular basis. Additional cost
savings are possible with outsourced pay slips delivery, even though
core functions like gross-to-net calculation are done in house.
Current Payroll Outsourcing Market
Currently, there are essentially two types of
companies that deliver services globally. One type uses the vendor
management model. These firms hire local providers to manage payroll in
each local country. These firms typically only gather information,
manage the information flow and provide the data to the client. All
gross-to-net calculations and most of the reports are performed locally
by hired organizations. While the time to implementation for a company
is relatively low since it requires only finding a partner and setting
up a working relationship, this model has some weak points. Local
providers are difficult to control, so it's difficult to assure high
quality and reliability of each local partner. In addition, not all
local providers have a good solution for data gathering. And finally,
this model typically proves too expensive for the end client.
Another model is the vendor that provides all
services in-house, and has local offices in each country. While the
company still must gather all information, this model is more reliable
since all calculations are performed in-house. Cost is still a problem,
however. Opening and maintaining new offices is expensive and
complicated by having to implement standard processes in each location.
It's difficult to control payroll teams and assure high-quality
services at each location. These companies typically also have low
scalability; they cannot easily cover new countries with their service
provision. As a result, more and more companies are moving to the
vendor management model, even with its problems.
However a new service delivery model for global
payroll outsourcing was suggested by Intercomp Global Services. Shared
service centers are used for service delivery in this model. Service
center is located in a selected region and service is delivered from it
to a number of countries. This model is likely to manage most of the
issues from the two models mentioned above: service provider processes
all calculations in-house, that quarantines high quality of services.
Cost is cut down since there are no additional margins and no need to
maintain own offices in each country. Scalability of the model is high
since only new personnel needs to be hired and trained to cover new
country. This model also provides easy communications with end client
as all team is located in one place. Add proprietary software used by
company which delivers state of art technology combined with reporting
tools and employee services and you will get a next generation of
global payroll outsourcing.
Global payroll outsourcing is a relatively new
field, one that is still in the process of development. With
multinational companies growing in size, number and scope, there is
clearly a need for a new model for payroll outsourcing. Service
delivery through local service centers, along with local support, might
be a positive next step in this service evolution.
Article Source: http://
www.articlesbase.com/accounting-articles/solving-multinational-
payroll-and-hr-challenges-2309378.html About the Author
Intercomp Global Services is a leading BPO
provider in EMEA, and pioneer in the CEE and CIS regions. We offer
extensive expertise and experience in accounting, HR administration
and, in particular, payroll services. Clients from all industries have
relied on Intercomp Global Services since 1994 for standardized
multi-country payroll services. Delivering to over 500 clients (mostly
Fortune 1000) varying from 1 to 14,000 employees across 32 countries
and growing.
For more information about how Intercomp Global
Services can assist you, please contact us:
www.intercompglobal.com
+ 36 21 380 1900
info@intercompglobal.com
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