Quality may or may not be sacrificed. And more often than not its the latter because of problems like communication and the distance barrier. But there's always a relative level to quality. Companies have an idea of the quality that they can afford to drop without pissing off their customers. There is always a minimum acceptable limit.
You are so wrong there! You think names like GE, IBM, HP, Texas Inst. etc have been top of the Fortune and Forbes charts for 30-50 years by just concentrating on costs? These names have mastered the long-term game. If to them the customer was less important than the profit, they wouldnt have lasted as long as they did. They earn profit because their stuff sells, and their stuff sells due to a happy customer. DO you think they don't know that?
I'm going to give you some examples from what I know personally about outsourcing.
My previous role was dealing with outsourcing for finance companies where we would take roles from countries and move it to India and from my experience in the banking operations quality always gets compromised. Usually its worse in the initial stage until things stabilize but we found out then as the leads & analyst got better in their roles the management would move them to new accounts belonging to our competitor (so as to kick their start their operations and move it to a mature stage for full sign off). And this cycle perpetuates itself but the given the cost savings my management was willing to overlook this. From my view I see this a compromise in quality as a whole because the work is not one to one would it have been had it been done onshore but like I said given the salary and the management structure of doing things its something we have to be realistic about.
As for customer satisfaction which is funnier because of the above and also some really pissed off clients we developed a list of client who we cannot afford to piss off and ones that we could piss off and started to service the ones we could not piss off ourselves (essentially bringing the work back onshore). So yes service for our lower ranking clients was compromised but deemed acceptable but the management.
And tell me something, you are a customer yourself, would you buy a product a second time if you're unhappy with the service or the customer support? Will HP be able to sell its Data Warehousing system year after year if its customers were not happy with the post-sales and maintenance support tasks? Dont underestimate the corporate customer or for that matter, any customer. They want value for money, but not at the cost of quality.
I can tell you why I still support cost as the driving factor, most of the biggest IT customers for HP Dell etc are banks and typically the top level management that makes the decision on purchase of goods are not the ones that deal with these issues. IT departments in the banks have very tight budgets as they are not a profit center but a cost center and they always looks at the bottom line. The ones that deal or notices issues like the ones you mentioned are usually much lower level people who have little impact on the decision making. So long as the IT equipment doesn't suffer a massive malfunction (which is the most important of course) even if the service level dropped by 10% or 20% the corporate customers will still go for it because its the cost that matters and thats what the shareholders look at.
Btw mate I am not putting down off shoring in case you think I am but I'm just trying to inject some realism here it aint all roses.
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