Outsourcing CAD Offshore
Assessing Service Provider Reliability
Lakshman Balaraman
If you have decided to outsource some of your CAD to an offshore
service provider ( OSP ), it is important that you carefully
evaluate your potential partner first. Outsource to them only if
they successfully pass through your appraisal sieve. Here are
some important evaluation criteria and methods for assessing
them.
The OSP Should Be Web-Savvy
Check if the OSP has a website. If they do not, in all
probability dealing with them will yield a bad experience. If
they have a website, check whether their postal address and
telephone number are displayed on it so that they are physically
reachable.
Give the OSP credit if the website has mostly text with limited
graphics, has almost no animation, clearly explains what the OSP
is doing and is easy to navigate. This implies detailed
knowledge on website design, which increases their web-savvy
rating.
Your CAD outsourcing is most probably going to involve
transferring large amounts of data over the web. This calls for
an OSP who is proficient with email. To evaluate this, send the
OSP a message asking for more information and see if you get a
response within 12 hours. The response should be perfectly
focused on your question. You have to be careful an
autoresponder (ie, a web-based answering machine) is not
replying to you, so formulate your question to require a
tailor-made reply.
Subsequently send two more questions related to the work you are considering giving the OSP. Check whether these responses too are timely and relevant.
If the OSP has a form on their website for sending them email,
give them extra points (smart webmasters do not put their email
addresses on their websites to discourage Spam robots from
finding the addresses and sending junk mail to them).
The OSP Should Have a Satisfactory Profile
Email the OSP a questionnaire that gathers a wide range of
information on them. Decide whether you like what you find. This
questionnaire should cover address information, telephone number of the individual dealing with you, company history, financial performance, references, specific CAD capabilities, track record, installed hardware, software platforms, manpower, HRD policies, data security and physical security. (If you would like to save the extended time and specialised labor involved
in compiling such a questionnaire, you can buy a bank of
200+ carefully formulated questions from The Magnum Group at
http://themagnumgroup.net/cadques1.htm for under $15.)
Get in touch with some of their references and ask them whether
they had a good experience with the concerned OSP.
The OSP Should Know Their CAD
Now it s time to ask them for a small paid sample, preferably a
minor portion of a project you plan to outsource. Check if their
output is satisfactory (you would know best about this).
Evaluate whether they asked you all the questions they should
have before they started drawing, which is a sign of good
planning practice.
The OSP Should Know Their Commercial Paperwork
Send them a detailed specification of the CAD work you want done and ask for a quotation. Evaluate their quotation based on
whether it clearly describes technical scope, cost, delivery
time, non-disclosure, modification costs, payment terms,
guarantee and mode of payment. If all these topics are covered,
you are probably talking to someone with commercial competence
- good!
Be Satisfied with the Contact Person
Phone this person and chat briefly with him/her. Decide
whether you feel he/she is competent and easy to deal with.
The Evaluation's Over: Now What?
By now you have an idea of how good the OSP is. Start by
sending them a modest assignment. Don't be worried if there
are many technical questions: these should decrease as the OSP
does more assignments for you. But that's not all. Careful
selection of offshore CAD service providers is not the only
factor involved in successful offshore CAD outsourcing. A major
cause of outsourcing breakdown is the client's failure to manage the ongoing process. There is a lot to be said here; it will all
emerge in my next article - stay tuned!
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