As multinationals continue the search for process
excellence and economies of scale, more and more processes are being
standardized and centralized, whether within a true shared services
organization or otherwise. One of the more recent entrants to this
increasingly crowded stage is payroll: more and more organizations are
making the move form disparate local, national or regional payroll
systems to one global payroll operation, centralized and optimized and
yielding significant cost savings. But its not without its
challenges....
1. Optimizing local payroll operations
It's all very well to make grand plans for
optimized, perfectly smooth global payroll operations, but if your
processes are a mess at a local level you've got little to no hope of
moving everything global without a great deal of heartache.
Furthermore, as one of the primary benefits of moving to a global
operation is saving on cost, it's vital to know where cuts can and
can't be made: where can you afford to drop staff numbers and where is
some kind of presence absolutely indispensable?
The first step towards a truly global operation is
to review your existing processes and operations (local, national, even
regional) and get as complete as possible an understanding of how they
relate to each other and how optimized they are in the first place.
"There's a range of issues to look at including
payroll efficiency, costs, risks (are any of the country operations
dangerously dysfunctional, or are there compliance issues?)
performance, supplier relationships and so on," says Keith Rogers of
Webster Buchanan Research, a market research and consultancy company
focusing on people management and multi-country payroll. "This helps
companies define their strategy – and in today's climate, this is all
about pragmatism rather than purism. We find that strategies are often
developed on a regional rather than global basis and in larger-scale
projects, companies tend to divide up their countries into different
tiers, focusing their primary efforts on Tier One. The aim is to
deliver quick wins – you need that of course to get initial project
approval and to keep stakeholders on board."
2. Ensuring compliance
No matter how pressing the cost drivers – or any
other motive – no organization can afford to move to a global payroll
system if this involves risking a lack of compliance with accounting
legislation in any of its countries of operation – and of course this
includes the audit requirements posed by Messrs Sarbanes and Oxley
(SOX). Concerns over compliance have traditionally been one of the main
inhibitors preventing firms from moving to a global operation; the need
to keep a degree of local knowledge within the system has led many
companies to maintain relatively broad and bottom-heavy payroll
organizations, frequently leading processes far from best-practice
scenarios.
However, improved technology, increased
familiarity with the shared service center concept (particularly the
rise of "hub-and-spoke") and the rise of global outsourcing providers
have all combined to ease the way to a compliance-friendly payroll
model. Organizations looking to outsource payroll – whether to a single
provider or numerous – should be confident (not forgetting the due
diligence, of course) that their providers are able to ensure
compliance for each and every jurisdiction they're active in. Meanwhile
firms looking to keep at least the majority of their payroll in-house
can turn to a number of existing methodologies to ensure compliance
doesn't inhibit best practice.
"A balanced scorecard approach can work well in
this instance. Using the BSC nine steps of success can be used to map a
high level scorecard and build lower levels from this, in order to
align local best practice and KPIs with a global one. This should
include audit requirements for Sox and any other countries requirements
such as the Data Protection Act in the UK," says Jeanette Hibbert, UK
Payroll Manager at the Kerry Group.
3. Getting the right balance between optimized
global processes and local flexibility
Combining elements of the two aforementioned
points, it's vital for organizations to achieve a healthy balance
between getting the global system optimized and retaining the necessary
flexibility at a local level. There's no point having ultra-pared-down
software running a super-Lean global payroll system if local
legislative and cultural idiosyncrasies, and rapidly fluctuating
employment terms, mean your operators have to go outside that system
for a high proportion of their activity.
At the other end of the scale, a single global
system capable of catering for every single one of those idiosyncrasies
for each and every one of your organization's employees doesn't exactly
fit the definition of "Lean" – and as no off-the-shelf package fitting
that description yet exists, building the system from scratch would
almost certainly entail the kind of expense that drives CFOs over the
psychological edge, so working with a vendor to tailor an existing
system to your needs is the logical step to take.
"Where companies use an on-premise system, the
leading multi-country vendors have built systems that can handle core
payroll processes for all countries centrally, and then layer local
country capability on top," explains Keith Rogers.
Meanwhile, outsourcing, here, is increasingly seen
as a way to square that particular circle, with providers having
already made the lion's share of the investment – but organizations
need to be totally confident in their partner's ability to make those
crucial local refinements at minimal extra cost.
"If you go down the outsourcing route… the leading
vendors' approaches vary: some have built their own outsourcing
backbone to deliver services in multiple countries, others act as
‘aggregators', working with payroll providers in individual countries
and then linking everything together through their own middleware to
provide a central interface to the customer," says Rogers.
4. Getting accurate, real-time reporting
The need for gold-standard reporting is of course
one of the major drivers behind a move to a global payroll system. With
a single system in place, the organization can retrieve crucial data
much quicker and with significantly less human involvement than is the
case with disparate regional systems; again, this helps with compliance
and audit issues as well as more obvious benefits like headcount
reduction.
Furthermore the single source for and format of
that data means that analysis thereof is simpler by orders of
magnitude. Comparisons between countries' (or regions', or localities')
effectiveness and efficiency can be done on a true apples-to-apples
basis, while monitoring factors like compensation costs and absenteeism
can be carried out across the organization using relatively simple and
low-cost tools. The ability to perform this analysis contributes
towards the agility which in critical times can prove the difference
between success and failure.
Organizations looking to retain payroll management
in-house while moving to a global operation need to ensure the systems
they're putting in place allow for this kind of reporting – it should
indeed be one of the cornerstones of the technology. Meanwhile those
turning to outsourcing providers should include reporting time and
accuracy in any KPIs being included at the SLA stage.
5. Keeping down technology acquisition and
maintenance costs
Implementing global payroll doesn't come free (but
then what does?). However, done right, cost savings can materialize
relatively quickly thanks to the reduction in headcount consequent to
centralizing processes, and reducing the support required on an ongoing
basis: this is a significant factor since support costs tend to make up
a large proportion of IT expenditure and the retained team will only –
in an ideal model - be dealing with one platform rather than a number
of different and distinct systems geographically. Up-front costs aren't
limited to the system acquisition and implementation, however: your
global payroll organization is going to need new infrastructure
including at least one and more likely (thanks to the ever-present
requirements of contingency planning) a number of centers, and some
training costs are frankly unavoidable.
Taking these cost factors out of the equation too
is of course a significant driver towards outsourcing – in all areas of
business, not just payroll. While most analysts maintain that cost
alone should not be the determining factor in any decision regarding
outsourcing, it's a rare outsourcing deal that ends up costing the
buyer more than keeping the process in-house would have done – and in
the case of global payroll, outsourcing from the outset means
organizations can reduce costs significantly at the
technology-acquisition stage and almost completely in terms of support
going forwards.
6. Ensuring employee confidentiality
Data protection is always a critical issue, and
especially so in the payroll arena thanks to the sheer number of
employees whose data needs to be protected. While the idea of moving to
a global system tends to set alarm bells ringing on the shop floor
thanks to what's seen as a reduction in the number of control levels in
place, theoretically speaking at least the smaller number of people
with access to the data and of access points into the system (not to
mention the much-reduced-if-not-entirely-eliminated points of
"translation" between different systems) should lead to increased data
security.
In general, says Jeanette Hibbert, before making
any transition policies should be reviewed in line with existing
general data protection requirements: "Security should be tight on
access levels and restrictions and data kept should be assessed to
review whether it is necessary and if so – how will it be kept? Paper
copies mean expensive secure storage and lengthy query resolution
times; data management systems where information is scanned can
alleviate this problem – security access can be built into these tools.
"
Outsourcing global payroll doesn't mean these
concerns aren't still of great import to an organization; however it
does mean that the organization's ability to control matters is
somewhat reduced since much of the data processing is happening outside
the organization itself. As such, data protection issues must be high
up the agenda from the beginning of negotiations and a series of checks
and balances needs to be put in place to ensure any providers handling
employee data are doing so in accordance with expected norms of
security. Due diligence is once again a watchword (or two).
7. Getting the right KPIs
The relevant metrics for a global payroll
operation don't vary significantly from those used to measure the
success of payroll on a smaller scale (although of course that doesn't
mean they're any less relevant). What is of particular relevance to any
global operation is, of course, the ability to analyze metrics on a
country-by-country or region-by-region basis, as discussed earlier.
"Again, I would measure this on a balanced
scorecard," says Jeanette Hibbert. "Payroll KPI's are measurable
regardless of location and the aim is always to pay accurately and
on-time. A simple spreadsheet can be compiled with the analysis built
in – these could be issued to each locality and reviewed centrally.
Issues to be measured would be: accuracy; timeliness; customer service
levels: and cost. Customer surveys in each locality are important and
should be issued at least annually to ensure the business is not
suffering."
Kevin Rogers adds at least one other metric into
the mix: "We recommend five key performance indicators in Webster
Buchanan's Payroll Performance Scorecard: Quality (Accuracy),
Timeliness, Compliance, Cost, and Customer Satisfaction. We then
propose some optional indicators. For example, if you're measuring
quality, you might find it useful to determine the ‘origin of errors':
was the error created by payroll itself, or by HR or the line of
business? By analyzing the root cause of errors, it's easier to
determine solutions when performance targets are missed."
8. Ensuring buy-in from the C-suite
As with any transformation process, the support of
the board can be critical in ensuring a successful transition. Payroll
tends to be one of the less-glamorous aspects of running a business and
as such practitioners often have to fight extra-hard for attention from
the top – especially when proposing a transformation requiring a
significant level of initial investment at a time when spending on
discretionary projects might have been pared down to the bone. However,
with all the advantages of moving to a global payroll system having an
impact on organizational health it's vital to keep exerting the
requisite pressure to get things moving forwards.
A coherent, accurate and all-inclusive business
case is crucial – particularly, says Jeanette Hibbert, one that
emphasizes the unique advantages of this particular transformation.
"The benefits of the transition should be built
into a business proposal following the review. The reporting benefits
would be a key success factor – not many organizations have this
ability at the moment," Hibbert enthuses, adding that "costs should
also be reviewed here with probable ROI listed."
9. Prioritizing geographical transition
Moving to a global payroll system – whether
outsourced or in-house - from a geographically fragmented one can be
done all at once – but it's an absolutely mammoth and risky operation
and almost certainly an entirely unnecessary one. Phasing various
geographies into the system in a systematic manner, while increasing
the duration of the transition, conveys a number of significant
advantages: primarily, instead of employing a large number of
transition specialists to cope with the integration of all countries at
once into the system (a frankly ludicrous challenge) a smaller team can
be recruited or trained to concentrate on fewer areas at once. A phased
approach also allows for the ironing-out of the inevitable teething
problems that will arise (and as a result of this element some
organizations may decide to introduce smaller, less-critical
country-operations into the system first).
No single correct modus operandi exists for this
prioritization since each organization's requirements are different
from those of the next. The decision as to which areas get brought into
the system in which phase may be down to external factors (when
outsourcing, for example, it may be that the provider's own systems,
center-locations or linguistic capabilities make it sensible to adopt
one geography before another); or it might be that internal political,
structural or financial factors mean one area takes preference over
another (or, from another way of looking at it, is used as a guinea pig
in the globalization experiment!). What's crucial, however, is that a
timeline for these phases is set significantly in advance of the
transformation - so that all potentially disruptive factors
(particularly the human one) can be taken into account long before
go-live – and stuck to with the minimum of disruption.
"Also," adds Jeanette Hibbert, "logistics should
play a part; a logical order should be used geographically. It should
be decided where the central management function should sit – then
logic would dictate that the local expertise would be best used to roll
that area out first... There should be a subject matter expert in each
country on the project for their area in order to ensure the project
results in progression, rather than regression to manual operations."
10. Getting the right structure: how many centers
and why?
Again, the precise structure of an organization's
global payroll operation depends on a great many factors. Firstly, of
course, as with any shared service-type operation there are significant
risks associated with putting all organizational eggs into a single
basket: merely for safety's sake it may be considered more sensible to
have at least two processing centers each capable of taking over the
other's workload in case of disaster. Too many centers, at the other
end of the spectrum, mean inefficiency, a lack of competitiveness and a
reduction of many of the gains that the move to a global system is
intended to generate.
As a result of the local compliance requirements -
and the value in retaining local knowledge - mentioned earlier some
degree of payroll presence in each country of operation is all but
unavoidable and, as a result, whatever the global structure, total
centralization is pretty much a pipedream at this juncture. However,
the greater the degree of centralization the greater the cost savings
so it's vital to ensure the organization has a firm stance on point 3
(above) right from the beginning of the planning stage.
In Jeannette Hibbert's opinion, "the ideal
solution is to have a centrally managed global payroll, split
regionally, with at least one subject matter expert in each country
(depending on levels of automation). The central global office should
really be used to manage the whole process and provide data analysis to
the organisation (if a central office is not in place it would be
difficult to operate global policies, best practice, KPI's,
benchmarking etc). With video conferencing, Web-ex and other technical
facilities this should not prove too much of a challenge – although
face-to-face support for remote sites should always be provided
periodically. Dotted-line management at remote sites can help the
in-country payroller feel supported – which can be a problem typically
in these circumstances. In terms of disaster recovery – there should
always be a secondary support at the remote sites, and technical
disaster recovery would depend on which method the organization chooses
to explore."
For those organizations looking to outsource
global payroll this is all somewhat less of an issue. However, the
structure of the provider's organization may remain a lesser or greater
factor (for reasons such as timezone compatibility, linguistic
capabilities etc) depending on the degree of interaction between buyer
and provider. It's important to make a full assessment of how any
potential provider's structure is going to impact upon your own needs
as an organization before going any further down the line towards a
deal.
________________________________________________________________________
This article was first published on the Shared
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Intercomp Global Services are payroll
delivery specialists with an extensive client base of more than 420
companies, including businesses listed among the Fortune Global 500.
Intercomp Global Services supports payroll processing in countries
located in Europe, the Middle East and North Africa, Asia Pacific, and
the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS). In key countries, we also
provide local services that include human resources (HR)
administration, accounting, and labor consulting.
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/human-resources-articles/
ten-global-payroll-challenges-and-how-to-overcome-them-2344620.
html About the Author
Jamie Liddell has worked in journalism since he
was a 17-year-old cub reporter for The Tico Times, Costa Rica's highly
regarded English-language weekly newspaper. Holding an MA in English
from Clare College, Cambridge University, Jamie came to the Shared
Services & Outsourcing Network from the world of overseas
property publishing where he worked on the industry's best-selling
publications for the UK and Ireland, and gave seminars at consumer and
b2b exhibitions and conferences internationally. |