When someone says they have a “no surprises” approach to collaborating with colleagues and business partners, what does that actually mean?
At Accelerance, we take it to mean a willingness to embrace transparency in the relationship between a customer and its software development partner, wherever they happen to be based in the world.
Doing so builds trust, enables clear communications, allows expectations to be managed, mitigates risks, and fosters continuous improvement.
It sounds obvious, but too many software outsourcing deals go off the rails because the parties involved haven’t been completely upfront with each other.
As Harvard Business Review points out, “business partners who trust each other spend less time and energy protecting themselves from being exploited, and both sides achieve better economic outcomes in negotiations”.
Establishing trust - its cultural
Establishing that trust is a process that starts in the due diligence phase, well before any outsourcing deal is signed. It’s a process that can vary to a large degree depending on the cultural backgrounds of the parties involved - an important consideration when you are looking to work with a company half a world away.
An HBR study found that the key to establishing trusting partnerships differs around the world. Managers in Western culture tend to take a “trust but verify” approach, assuming a potential partner is trustworthy, but undertaking to do their own due diligence all the same.
“In Latin American cultures,” HBR tells us, “the social relationship comes first, and the business after. Shared values are the primary criteria for judging trustworthiness”.
In the Middle East, respect is paramount. Business people tend to take a “verify, then trust” approach, establishing first that the relationship can be formed on a mutually respectful basis.
Common to all cultures, however, is a desire for openness, which typically involves establishing shared goals that everyone understands, good communication practices, and clear KPIs to track progress.
“Transparency during negotiations is the only way to ensure that everyone understands the partners’ goals (whether their primary focus is on improving operations or launching a new strategy) and that everyone is using the same measures of success,” management consultancy McKinsey points out.
“Even more important, transparency encourages trust and collaboration among partners, which is especially important when you consider the number of executives across the organizations who will likely rotate in and out of leadership roles during the life of the relationship.”
To be clear, being transparent with your business partner doesn't require you to go “open kimono” and give all your business secrets away.
Verification + trust
Verifying the suitability of software development firms to join our network of trusted outsourcing partners occupies a huge amount of our attention at Accelerance. We do the groundwork so that our customers know the partners we recommend are trustworthy.
But we also view transparency as not just a desirable trait, but a fundamental ongoing requirement if the software outsourcing partnerships we help broker are to enjoy long term success.
That’s why we spend so much time and energy in the negotiation phase of outsourcing deals working with the customer and partner to build the relationship on a solid foundation. It pays off time and time again for everyone concerned.
Here are five things a transparent approach to developing business partnerships with your software outsourcing software involves:
Conclusion
Building trust, enabling clear communication, managing expectations, mitigating risks, and fostering continuous improvement all rely on transparent practices.
By embracing transparency, both clients and outsourcing partners can establish strong foundations, unlock the full potential of their collaboration, and achieve remarkable results in the ever-evolving world of software development outsourcing.