Renegotiating Outsourcing Contracts Gallup NM

Sitting down with a vendor to renegotiate an existing outsourcing contract can be a challenging task. David Patzwald, CIO of Schneider Electric North America, offers the following suggestions for how to make your negotiation sessions a fruitful-not frustrating-experience.

National Companies

Business Support Specialists
(804) 675-9242
Richmond, VA
Sherpa Business Solution Inc
(845) 336-9210
709 Grant Ave
Lake Katrine, NY
Center Partners
(208) 769-3800
1201 W Ironwood Dr
Coeur D Alene, ID
Aramark Uniforms
(904) 695-1922
5698 Commonwealth Ave
Jacksonville, FL
Matrixx Marketing
(904) 636-1000
8000 Baymeadows Way
Jacksonville, FL
Outsource Multiple Solutions
(781) 229-9300
169 Bedford St
Burlington, MA
Aramark
(903) 984-4273
1100 Broadway Blvd
Kilgore, TX
Aramark Correctional Services
(863) 519-6867
550 N Restwood Ave
Bartow, FL
Viad Corp
(214) 467-4205
1415 N Cockrell Hill Rd
Dallas, TX
Intelli Teach
(404) 874-0901
3390 Peachtree Rd NE
Atlanta, GA

By Diane Frank, CIO.com,

Sitting down with a vendor to renegotiate an existing outsourcing contract can be a challenging task. David Patzwald, CIO of Schneider Electric North America, offers the following suggestions for how to make your negotiation sessions a fruitful-not frustrating-experience.

Don't have only IT at the table. Include people from other parts of the business, as close to the top as possible. No matter how much CIOs might wish otherwise, vendors will behave differently when the senior person in the room is from the business side.

Get blended measures of health. It is important to establish health-of-contract metrics for both financial and emotional satisfaction, and to balance them in the vendor's mind. When one goal becomes more important than the other-racing to meet product delivery milestones leads to cutting the head of production out of the loop-a contract begins to fail.

Include vendor input. The CIO should have the final decision when you're considering whether standing applications or new initiatives should end, but don't make those decisions without first talking to the vendor who services those projects.

Copyright © 2008 IDG. All rights reserved.


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