Yet another Analogy- ‘Outsourcing, the Dolphin Park analogy’
Some time back I had described
the restaurant analogy for Performance engineering. Here is another one. This
time it is on outsourcing, but in lighter vein.
Outsourcing is well discussed and I do not have anything more to share
on it that readers would not know. In
fact this narrative is more about problem solving skills of a person I worked
with at some point of time. I would like to mention that all content here are
fictional in nature.
The Dolphin park analogy was inspired
by this middle manager I had the privilege of working with and would refer to
as ‘Dee’. Dee was perfect fit for middle
management and an embodiment of its values as reflected in his waistline. He
had no vision and no time for other’s vision. His job was keeping delivery
well-oiled and he did that extremely well. He always prepared for worst case
scenario mode. I had pointed to him on need to get his cholesterol checked. The
morning of lipid test I found him devouring fish curry with wine. I told him
that he needed to fast twelve hours before test. He mentioned, he wanted to
know worst case results. Dee always had the last laugh. Well after everyone
stopped, the halls would echo with his laughter.
Outsourcing is extremely
challenging business. There has to be
year on year revenue growth, cost reduction for all, innovation and improving
client and employee satisfaction. Dee’s favorite comment was ‘who will look
after my satisfaction?’ With
commoditization of outsourcing business Dee was under intense pressure to find
other channels of profitable growth. On
an occasion Dee visited Dolphin Park with his children, where kids could swim
with Dolphins for a hefty price. The only fish that interested Dee was one in
his curry, but the Dolphins gave him his Eureka moment. No customer in that
park bothered about price and there were no satisfaction surveys. Quick cost calculation, few slides and new
premium service was ready to be launched.
Inauguration and photo-ops were
completed with as many folks packed into a photograph as a wide pic panorama
camera would allow. Now came the difficult part, procuring dolphins. It was
discovered that international rules disallowed trade in dolphins. Resourceful
as ever, Dee contacted his uncle who ran fish trawlers in Bangladesh. He mentioned that some unfortunate dolphins
would get trapped in their catch. International rules also promulgated
rehabilitation of accidently caught dolphins. He mentioned that it was beyond
his resources to rehabilitate the dolphins as he focused only on catching and
selling fishes. Dee recalled he had paid by accident few bucks to ‘Friends for
Dolphins society’ who had come to his kid’s school. Actually he did have pretty vivid memory of that incident. Dee was was very sorted out person. He would know appraisal ratings of his reportees right at the start of year and also currency bills in his wallet would be sorted from lowest to highest denomination. Dee was standing at bus stop to drop his kids while some volunteers were passing box to collect contributions. Since all parents seemed to be donating, lion hearted Dee also contributed. Unknown to him his wife had borrowed a 100 buck note from his wallet and put it back, but not in right order. As the first currency note picked up and dropped by Dee flew into the box did he catch the 'two zeros' on it. Since there were some curious onlookers while Dee contributed he could not do much about it other than put a brave face and hope they noticed. Collateral benefit of that incident to organization and client was that 'transaction rollback' facility was seriously emphasized in all subsequent projects. Anyway, quick contacts were made
and the society enabled import of the Dolphin’s to the newly created ‘Swim with
the Dolphin’ parks.
There was enormous publicity and
great response and for a while it seemed perfect. Alas, happiness is never
permanent, at least in outsourcing business.
Question to Dee was – ‘what next’?
The dolphins were rarely caught and so business model was not scalable.
Resources engaged in managing dolphins were from coastal areas or those whose
families were connected to fishery business. Also dolphins were proving to be
notoriously expensive. Dee didn’t even know that they required insurance and
care funds once they aged and were not games worthy. Resources engaged in dolphin care were also
grumbling as this is not what they expected to do. It was apparent to all that
the party was over but not to Dee the eternal problem solver. Dee came up with
his solution- ‘give up some dolphins’. There was uproar on this outlandish
suggestion as it was already proving hard to find more dolphins. Big review
meeting was called with frothy mouthed seniors. One thing that Dee was very
confident about was handling people like him no matter their seniority level.
His philosophy in his words was- a dog always recognizes another one and understand too.
The only difficult part came in
explaining it to the resources. They
were shell shocked. It wasn’t enough they had to take care of dolphin which was
not what they expected to do, now they were expected to act like them. There
was a revolt across ranks. A good manager has solution for everything and where
he doesn’t he does a very good job of explaining the problem. Dee was always a
people manager since he anyway had no other mentionable skill. With great wisdom and benevolence he
explained it to them. ‘Guys- people spend $200/hour to swim with a
dolphin. You will get to do that for
free!’
Dee may not have had great vision
or technical skills, but I admired his problem solving skills. It is a great
asset to have in challenging industry such as outsourcing.
Comments
Problem solving is the biggest skill...hats off to Mr Dee ( But who is he :D)