The joy of letting someone else do it

Published 9:00 pm Thursday, January 26, 2006

Lori Booker says her public relations firm’s profits rose 25 percent after she hired a company to handle the company’s human resources needs. The reason: She had been devoting too much time to employee issues.

When small companies outsource some of their operations, owners and top executives find they can focus more on what really matters: building the business and serving clients and customers better. And with a growing number of companies available to do virtually any kind of work for another business, an owner can outsource as much as he or she can afford.

Booker handled her human resources issues herself for the first decade that her Maitland, Fla.-based company, Carlman Booker Reis PR, was in existence. But about 10 years ago, after spending an entire day interviewing workers’ compensation insurance providers, Booker said she’d had enough. She signed up with a professional employer organization that is now her human resource operation.

Besides saving her time and energy, Booker said of the employer group, “They keep me from making mistakes that could hurt the agency” by keeping track of changes in employment-related laws and regulations.

Employer organizations and other personnel providers are a popular resource for small businesses. Accounting and billing, marketing and sales are other company operations that business owners cheerfully offload onto experts.

Outsourcing is not a new concept, having been around for decades. Manufacturers, for example, may have turned out their own products, but most bought components and packaging from other companies. But outsourcing continues to expand as a necessary part of doing business for a growing number of small businesses.

Not everyone automatically embraces outsourcing. Many new entrepreneurs tend to be a little resistant to the idea. First, many believe they should do everything themselves. Second, it does cost money to have someone else do your work for you, and in the early years of a business, cash flow is a particular concern.

But small businesses that outsource say the expense is well worth it. Garvey’s Office Products in Niles, Ill., outsources its prospecting for new customers because it’s more cost-effective than having its own sales people make cold calls.

“It’s a time-consuming job to do. You need to be able to make 50 calls an hour to sometimes get one or two appointments,” marketing director Sheila Gartland said. “We’d much rather have our sales reps focusing on the accounts they have and making sure they get taken care of.”

Gartland said the company doesn’t outsource any other operations. “We do like having someone in-house for anything to do with human resources or our employees and anything to do with our customers,” she said.

While support functions such as human resources and accounting are the areas that tend to be outsourced the most, some companies find it makes sense to outsource even some of their core operations. Writing is a major part of the job description for executives at Booker’s firm, but sometimes writing projects will be outsourced to people who have a particular skill or talent. Many advertising firms outsource some of their graphic arts projects, although they have their own artists on staff.

What to outsource is a very individual decision for many firms. It depends not just on where a firm’s strengths lie, but also the philosophy of its owners.

PrescribedSolutions, a New York-based company that makes customized skin care products sold at doctor’s offices, outsources testing and manufacturing, but it won’t ask another company to handle its marketing.

“Where we can add more value and make us unique, that’s what we keep in-house,” chief operating officer Aurelian Lis said.

It also won’t outsource sales, because that cuts down on contact with the doctors who are the company’s customers. “We found that customer relationships are too valuable. … If we outsource that, we lose that feedback,” Lis said.

The increasing sophistication of accounting software, which now includes inventory controls, has also made it easier and more sensible for the company to keep its own books rather than outsource, Lis said.

Building Small Business is a weekly column on the topic by the Associated Press.