Delivering timely and accurate payments to your employees has a direct impact
on their morale and engagement. Your payroll team plays a crucial role in
delivering the right results to your employees and your business.
How much is your employees’ time worth? And how much are you willing to invest
in protecting your company’s credibility?
A question of cost comparison
Calculating global payroll return on investment (ROI) can be complicated, as
the total cost of ownership (TCO) isn’t solely based on cutting costs. Bill
Kirwin, the Gartner Inc. analyst known as the “Father of TCO,” puts it this
way: “TCO is really about process improvement and best practices that result
in lower costs and improved service levels.”
Gartner defines TCO as “a comprehensive assessment of information technology (IT) or other costs across enterprise boundaries over time. For IT, TCO includes hardware and software acquisition, management and support, communications, end-user expenses and the opportunity cost of downtime, training and other productivity losses.”
For payroll TCO, consider questions such as:
- What is the trusted source of data?
- Is that data current?
- Where is the core HR data coming from?
- What kind of software is being used?
- Is it a legacy software platform?
- Is there a longer-term strategy to replace the HR system?
Though it’s possible to get a positive ROI from an in-house solution, it’s a
considerable investment, one that many businesses aren’t in a position to
make. Many companies have large employee populations in a few countries and
smaller employee populations in other countries. The cost to obtain country-
specific modules plus staff for in-house payroll and tax competencies for each
country can prove to be prohibitive.
Country regulations change frequently, so you must factor the time, cost and
work effort to keep these solutions compliant. Employees must learn new
software, data must be transferred effectively, and a foundation of processes
must be established.
Is payroll processing core to your business?
Many companies think that the best way to save money is to keep processes in-
house, including payroll. Though this may make sense for certain businesses in
certain situations, it often introduces inefficiencies and opens the company
to unnecessary risk. This is especially true for companies with a global
presence.
Consider your current payroll processes: How many people in your organization
touch the payroll activity, and how much of their time is spent on it? Is that
their core business function?
In countries where you have a thousand or so employees to process, you may be
able to budget for a payroll team. However, for a smaller office, it may be
the general manager of a particular country who also processes local payroll.
More than likely, the general manager is not an expert in local payroll laws,
and even honest mistakes can lead to serious consequences, including fines,
labor strikes and, in certain countries, jail time for noncompliance.
In addition to noncompliance consequences, your company may experience damage
to reputation that’s irreparable. So, although having your current staff
manage your international payroll might appear to be the least-expensive
option, it can put your company and people at significant risk.
Outsourcing global payroll for improved ROI
The potential complexity and consequences of in-house payroll often make a centralized managed payroll solution a much better return on your investment. In a
centralized global payroll solution, an outsourced vendor manages the end-to-
end payroll process, including integration from an existing HCM, validation of
data input, in-country gross-to-net calculations and balancing, along with all
the downstream processes of payroll reports, tax and legislative filings, and
bank and general ledger file creation. The global payroll solution becomes
your shared payroll services organization providing the local expertise across
your global footprint.
The cost model is generally based on an employee-per-month or employee-per-
pay-slip service fee, allowing you to develop a more predictable cost model
based on your growth plans. This reduces your internal talent costs by
eliminating the need for more costly country-specific competencies and
experience, as well as overcoming staffing fluctuations due to peak processing
or time away from the office issues such as vacation, holidays, sickness and
other types of leave.
Here’s an example: An organization has 6,000 employees across multiple
countries. It has a fragmented approach to payroll, with a local vendor
solution in each country. And though the company utilizes a legacy HR solution
as its core HR master data source, it hasn’t quite built up the functionality
for capturing all the payroll-relevant data requirements in each country. At
this point, it’s just holding master data. Staff manually input necessary data
locally to ensure payrolls are completed on time, and then re-key data into
the HR system after-the-fact, if at all, for corporate reporting.
Utilizing the Gartner TCO approach, the company benchmarks its capital costs,
administrative costs, technical support and end-user operations.
Capital costs include the hardware, software and network costs for each
country. Administrative costs include legal, vendor oversight and management.
Technical support includes development of interfaces to core business systems
as well as ongoing day-to-day maintenance activities such as network
monitoring and loading balancing alongside installing routine patches or
implementing broad scale upgrades. And finally, end-user operations include
all resources that touch the payroll activities, which encompass the payroll
team but also the partial resources from Finance, Treasury, HR and business
line managers.
If the company opts to outsource its global payroll, much of the related capital investment would transition
from a capital expenditure that amortizes over time to an operating
expenditure, allowing the expense to be deducted in the accounting period
during which it was incurred, thus reducing the corporate tax liability. The
global payroll provider will also assume all hosting, monitoring and
maintenance responsibilities.
Choosing the right partner
It’s important to keep in mind that not all global payroll models and providers are alike.
Administrative cost savings should be achieved through a single-partner
contract and an ongoing single-vendor relationship. Some vendors will require
in-country contracts, so this burden may be lessened but not removed.
Integration of your existing HCM, time, benefits and finance systems with a single environment—not country-by-
country—is key. Your business will change, so integrating into a single
environment prevents the headache and costs of ongoing upgrades by country.
A vendor with a granular global reporting solution who will work with you
upfront to standardize processes and harmonize payroll data across all your
countries will substantially reduce your team’s work effort to collect,
collate and produce accurate global analysis and reports each pay period.
Using an outsourced solution does not mean that you eliminate your end-user
operation resources. You will still maintain responsibility for gathering
variable input data, obtaining management approvals on variances such as
overtime or shift changes, and approving the final payroll.
Typically, companies will set up a centralized or regional shared services
group to manage the retained functions and redeploy employees to other areas
of the business. Cost savings will come from spending less time on non-core
business tasks. Cost savings should also be achieved in the type of talent
required, as you should no longer require a redundancy staff of multilingual,
experienced payroll and tax specialists for each country.
The global payroll provider’s expertise in compliance or cultural issues
specific to each country helps clean up the myriad areas that could have led
to litigation or fines. Having an organization that monitors and manages
compliance, while giving advice and support on legislation and regulation
changes when needed, will allow your company to focus on other important areas
of business. This has a positive effect on the growth of the company—and on
its profits.
Furthermore, management at all levels could rest easy, knowing that their
employees are cared for and their business interests are safe. Calculating
global ROI—and then acting on those calculations—can be complex and daunting.
But with the right global payroll partner, the process is worthwhile, and
likely to lead to improved performance and significant cost savings throughout
the organization.
Learn more about the advantages of a global payroll solution, including
compliance across borders, integration with HCM software and improved
processes and at multinational organizations by contacting us now.
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