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How healthy is your localization partner’s supply-chain?In the July/August edition, the Harvard Business Review had an interesting article entitled Just How Healthy Is Your Global Business Partner which highlighted how corporations were changing the way they assessed outsourcing relationships. Although the article profiled manufacturing I thought it was particularly relevant in the localization business which traditionally relies so heavily on outsourcing and subcontracting as a business model.
Outsourcing and subcontracting are rife in localization at a number of levels. Typical practice for global scale MLV’s is to subcontract to SLV’s on a language-by-language or region-by-region basis. The problem for the company procuring the localization services is that they are disconnected from those SLVs and have no way to predict the stability of the companies that are actually going to be performing the work. Procurement departments and selection committees will often spend a great deal of time reviewing financial stability of a potential localization partner – work which is rendered useless if the actual production is performed by a completely different organization. I would recommend anyone tackling a vendor consolidation to start begin asking questions that will identify stability issues not just at the MLV / master contractor level but at each point in the production supply chain. Here are some key questions:
Having confidence in a trading partner means having confidence that the partner knows what to do in the event of a breakdown in their subcontractor supply chain. Where subcontractors are part of the equation, as Josh says,
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[...] professional, and has already published several interesting posts. In particular, I found “How healthy is your localization partner’s supply-chain?” should be required reading for most buyers of translation services, and “The case for [...]