My profile on the PwC alumni intranet site

I was recently profiled on the PwC alumni site in my role as Master of the Worshipful Company of Management Consultants.

I am grateful to PwC and its ancestor firms (I joined what was then Deloitte Haskins and Sells), for giving me entry to the fascinating world of management consulting. For those without access to the PwC alumni site, this is the gist of the profile:

Chris Sutton, Master of the Worshipful Company of Management Consultants (PwC, 1986-2000)

Chris tells us a little bit about his experiences:

What are you up to now?

The Master is the Volunteer CEO. My focus is on driving the strategy of the company, which includes Pro-bono consulting and mentoring, providing education through Bayes Business School and our Pro-bono Centre for Management Consulting Excellence, and participating in events ranging from formal livery dinners to pancake racing for charity and a charity sleepout for the homeless in Guildhall Yard. As Master I also act as the ambassador for the Company at a range of events in the City of London, and preside over a lovely ceremony where we admit new members to the Company.

What does a typical day (or week) look like for you? 

I am a working Master, in that I also do management consulting assignments as an independent consultant, mainly in the international development and social justice sectors. So there is a lot of multi-tasking – except for each Friday and some Sundays where I volunteer as a chaplain in a prison (no mobiles or laptops allowed!). In summer terms I teach management consulting to MSc Management students at Bayes Business School, where it is great to be with the consultants of the future!

What are your passions, and how have they impacted the direction of your career? 

Like many management consultants, I enjoy variety and actively seek out interesting and challenging opportunities. I am also committed to life-long learning; having become a chartered accountant with DH+S in 1989, I recently became a chartered management consultant. I had a great 13 years at PwC and its predecessor firms, working primarily in the banking sector. Then I joined Logica (now part of CGI) because I wanted to get into Outsourcing and rose to become global MD of BPO. After 15 years there I went independent. As all independents will tell you, there are periods of feast and famine, and in one famine I volunteered to work with a charity in Rwanda. That charity did work in prisons, and the experience there led me to focus on international development and social justice as my consulting sector of choice. And ultimately to become a volunteer prison chaplain in the UK, as well as recent roles as interim head of finance capability at Plan International, and interim head of strategy at Nacro.

Who has been the greatest influence on you during your career? 

In my early career it was great client leaders like Don Argus, the then CEO of National Australia Group; in recent times it is Emmanuel Olusola King, a British Nigerian prison chaplain.

What is your fondest memory of your time at PwC? 

Bizarrely, a short consulting engagement in the city of Zaporozhye in Ukraine in 1993 – there was so much energy and excitement in creating a new country. My heart bleeds for what is happening in that city today.

Are you still in touch with any of your former colleagues? 

Yes – there are around a dozen PwC alumni who are members of the Worshipful Company of Management Consultants, and I come across many others in other livery companies such as the Chartered Accountants, the HR professionals, the Information Technologists, the Marketors and the Tax Advisors.

What did you learn during your time at PwC that you still keep with you today? 

The combination of audit and management consulting training taught me to keep asking questions until I truly understand what people are telling me.

What do you value most about the alumni network? 

It’s a great resource for connecting with people, and also for hearing truly inspirational stories at alumni events

What three people would you invite to a dinner party? 

Michael Mainelli (the next Lord Mayor of London subject to election, and an inspirational Management Consultant); Emmanuel Olusola King (my mentor as a prison chaplain) and Ms Kanan Barot who will likely succeed me in October as the next Master of the WCOMC.

Where is your favourite holiday destination? 

Greece. I studied Classics at university, and am enthralled by the ancient history of Greece and the archaeological sites. I have enjoyed at least 20 family holidays in Greece, always to different places, and there is still so much more to see. My favourite place within Greece is the ancient site of Delphi, standing among the ruins high on the mountainside, and looking out over groves of olive trees towards the distant sea.

What would be your motto? 

I will borrow for myself the motto of the WCOMC: “Change through Wisdom”

What have been your main learnings over the last couple of years? 

As someone who is naturally a bit introvert, I have enjoyed discovering an extrovert side through meeting so many fascinating people as Master of the WCOMC. At a practical level, coming out of the pandemic, face to face meetings are great, zoom is good, but a day of trying to combine face to face and zoom meetings is a challenge I have yet to solve.

Master of the Worshipful Company of Management Consultants

I was honoured to be installed last night as the new Master of the Worshipful Company of Management Consultants.

The Worshipful Company of Management Consultants enjoyed the wonderful atmosphere of Apothecaries Hall,the oldest extant livery hall in the City of London, for our annual installation dinner last night. We also installed Kanan Barot, Andy Miles, Malcolm McCaig and Collette Stone as our new Wardens. Ian White was admitted as our newest Court Assistant.

We were so pleased to have the company of distinguished guests including Professor Sir Anthony Finkelstein, President, City, University of London as our guest speaker, Sherriff Andrew Marsden, Professor Andre Spicer, Dean of Bayes Business School, Master of the WCSIM Philip Thomas, Master of the Charterhouse Peter Aiers, and Commander James Nisbet whose Sea Cadets formed an excellent carpet guard.

A key theme of the new Master’s year is to build on our great relationships with City, University of London and Bayes Business School.

We were also really pleased to be joined by our members Lucinda Peniston Baines, board member of the Management Consultancy Association, and Peter Johnson, Advisory Committee member of the Institute of Consulting, and we look forward to building on our shared heritage with the MCA and IOC.

Working with business school students to help the economy re-emerge after the pandemic

So pleased to be back in the lecture room at Cass Business School last week with the very talented 2020/21 cohort of MSc Management students. 60% of the students are in London, 40% are overseas so my lectures are both F2F and online. Thanks to all our clients who have offered management consulting projects to the student teams – many of these clients are Cass Alumni.

This year’s clients range from multinational corporates to private equity and fintechs, and the work ranges across brand and marketing strategy, business case development, product development, staff wellbeing policies, supply chain management and consulting support to a new business launch. Client demand for projects has been strongest in the financial services and construction / real estate sectors as clients plan for post-lockdown growth.

The student teams now have six weeks to analyse their clients’ situations and needs, research options and come up with practical solutions and recommendations which fit within the context of their clients’ strategic priorities, resources and constraints. I am looking forward to some great presentations at the end of June.

Coming out of lockdown – testing the atmosphere

So as we workers get ready to go back to our offices (realising some are already back, some have a while to wait, and some may have never left!) what good advice is out there? Too much, I feel, and much of it conflicting.

Scrolling through my old photos, I came across one I took last September, way back in those days when you could visit a museum. In this case it was a visit to a working industrial building, the gloriously ornate Abbey Mills Pumping Station in east London, as part of the wonderful Open House weekend.

This must be one of the poshest sewage stations in the world, designed in the Victorian age. And at ground level, there are no nasty smells. But for all the glamour, the staircase leads to the business end of the operations, and I guess the signage is necessary if the virus has impacted your sense of smell.

“Test the atmosphere before entering” is great advice for going out of lockdown and back to work, I think. Yet again, there is probably a consulting thesis to be written about all the different atmospheres that need testing in the workplace, and the myriad tests you could pay a consultant to do….

Consultants will need a significant change of skills by 2030

Together with Dr Mike Fenn, I was pleased to lead this important research project for the CMCE. The text below summarises the findings and recommendations.
A copy of the full report can be accessed free of charge through the following link: https://www.cmce.org.uk/projects

In 2018 the Centre for Management Consulting Excellence (CMCE), a pro-bono organisation established by the Worshipful Company of Management Consultants that

brings together management consultants, academics and other stakeholders in the management consulting community, conducted research into the skills that management consultants will need to sell and deliver assignments in 2030.

We sourced data from 157 respondents through face to face interviews and an online survey. The respondents comprised not only consultants and their clients, but a broad range of stakeholders. The consultants came from both large and small firms, and many have management experience in industry.

Respondents were asked to rank and comment on a number of technology and societal drivers of change, in terms of the scale of their likely impact on the skills needed by consultants. The survey then asked whether the traditional skills of a consultant (change management and the like) would still be relevant by 2030. We also gave space in the survey for respondents to provide unprompted insights.

Cyber Security (as a risk management skill) came out top in the impact rankings, with cyber risks being seen by respondents as a potential massive roadblock to a digital future beset by “unknown unknowns”. How to assess the risks, and how much of an organisation’s limited resources should be expended, in a context where assailants are out to destroy your business or steal your IP? While there will continue to be a technical battle between the good and bad guys, management consultants will be expected to drive board level discussions on steering their clients’ businesses through the cyber minefield.

In second place came AI (Artificial or Augmented Intelligence). There was a huge polarisation of views; some respondents see AI as huge disruptor, others see consultants taking it in their stride. Several respondents argue that the full impact will be felt by 2040 not 2030. New consulting skills will be in demand in framing questions, assessing how AI insights can be translated into human capabilities to deliver results, and advising on ethical implications and accountability.

In third place came the trend among consultants towards self-employment. Respondents agreed that concepts such as portfolio careers and work/life balances are here to stay, while also recognising that much of the new technology (AI engines, for example) will demand a level of investment that only big consultancies can afford. Will there be anti-trust legislation by 2030 if big firms act as AI monopolists? Respondents also commented about the pressures for independent consultants to both deliver and sell, with a new breed of agencies already offering to sell.

While coming out lower in the impact rankings, the other prompted themes – Big Data,

Globalisation, Internet of Things and Robotics all generated incisive comments.

Timeless consulting skills such as senior relationship building and change management will remain very important in 2030, as humans look to humans to contextualise and interpret the recommendations that technology will generate. This comes with two provisos – consultants must invest in understanding the new technologies if they are going to be able to interpret them, and they must beware the dangers of interpreting purely through the lens of past experience. The T-shaped consultants of 2030 (combining both deep specialist and broad generalist ability) must

also need resilience in order to thrive at an increased pace of change.

The most frequently mentioned “new skills” that consultants will need, according to our

respondents, are

New Technology | Cyber Security | Innovation | Self-promotion | Cultural adaptation | Empathy

There will be a change, and perhaps some reduction, in the opportunities for junior consultants to enter the market, with AI and Robotics taking over some of today’s entry-level consulting activity. Yet there will be new junior roles in scrubbing and keeping secure, at an industrial scale, the data that will feed the new technologies. We will also see an increased percentage of data scientists on many consulting assignments.

We asked our respondents: “All things considered, what change will there be in Consulting Skills needed in 2030 versus today?”

The overwhelming answer from our respondents is that the impact will be incremental, not radical. It suggests that adaptable consultants can march forward to 2030 in their stride. But the survey data rings an alarm bell for consultants when the results of consultants and non-consultants are compared. Non-consultants see the impact of cyber security, AI and self-employment on consultant’s skills as being much more radical by 2030 than do the consultants themselves.

There are some powerful implications here, which might lead to two alternative conclusions.

Consultants see the world through a filter of “we have seen changes before, we will overcome” and are better prepared than their clients give them credit for.

Or

Consultants are under-estimating challenges that are much more evident to the clients that they seek to serve, calling in to question whether they will have the knowledge and aptitude to be of use to clients in 2030.

Both are valid hypotheses, and of course for the management consulting profession the first one comes across more comfortably than the second.

Yet it could be disastrous to ignore the second conclusion.

Consultants must direct their inquisitiveness and knowledge building to get to grips with what is happening with new technologies and demographic trends, and to understand better the implications that these will have both for their clients and their clients’ customers. These are not all things that are fully known today, but that fact cannot be an excuse for any complacency. Clients need consultants to be thinking ahead of them, not lagging behind.

The CMCE wishes to thank all the people who gave their time to participate in the research, and the MBA students from Coventry University in London and Cass Business School for their invaluable support in collecting and analysing the data. The CMCE also appreciates the sponsorship provided by Sheffield Haworth for the publication of the report into our research.

Finance Transformation – are we nearly there yet?


Consulting support to CFOs, helping them to enhance the efficiency and effectiveness of their Finance function, is proving to be a hardy perennial in the market. Surely all the consultancy that was purchased going all the way back since the 1980s should mean that the problems have now been well and truly fixed? The number of Finance Transformation engagements in the market today show that this is clearly not the case. Why is that so?

During my career I have engaged with Finance functions in many roles. Beginning as an audit student, I learnt the skills of understanding what the audit tests were telling me – when I could draw robust conclusions and when I had to recognise that the results looked odd and I needed to investigate further. Then as a junior manager in the Finance function of a fast-growing international bank, I performed the monthly cycle of Finance operations, budgeting and reporting, and learned how to strike the right balance between supporting and challenging business executives.

Ten years followed in Big 4 Finance Transformation consulting, at a time when ERP implementations were in full flow, and I worked with large complex clients to design and implement new processes and reporting suites, global shared service centres and business partner roles. I then moved joined a technology company in a general management role, where I designed and delivered outsourced Finance services to external clients. As a global managing director with activities in multiple geographies, I had my own Finance business partner who helped me to understand our financial performance and survive in a world of tough growth targets.

Nowadays back in management consulting, I interact frequently with Finance functions when working on business process transformation assignments in complex organisations. Periodically I take myself right back to the basics of debits and credits, volunteering with small charities / NGOs in developing countries, working jointly with the local team to design and implement new processes and systems such as Quickbooks. Finally, I am CFO of two not-for-profit organisations in the UK.

Back then to the fact that Finance Transformation assignments seem to be a hardy perennial. Why has the transformation challenge not yet been put to bed? What insights can I bring from the multiple different capacities in which I have worked with Finance teams for more than thirty years?   

Accounting fundamentals

The core building blocks of debits and credits are still there and show no sign of disappearing. You cannot argue that Finance has had to respond to a fundamental shift in its foundations, in the same way that a move to service-oriented architecture has transformed IT design and development.

Accounting policies and the rules for presenting items in financial reports have continued to evolve, giving rise to short term assignments to help meet the new requirements – the current “all hands on deck” requirement in the UK is in the insurance sector, where IFRS17 is significantly changing the way in which future insurance liabilities must be shown in an insurance company’s accounts.

Such projects cut across the multiple dimensions of people, processes, data flows and systems, but are more technical than they are transformational. The short term pain in responding to such new policies and regulations is in the need to reconfigure data flows, and potentially also in the need to build new sub-ledgers to hold increasingly detailed levels of data.

Tools of the trade

While the building blocks have remained the same, there has been a continued evolution in the tools used by Finance functions to access data rapidly and to reduce paper and re-keying. Good examples are the real time interface of bank transactions from a bank’s systems into accounting ledgers, and the ever-increasing availability of self-service tools for running reports and creating transactions such as expense claims.

Robotic Process Automation is being adopted, particularly by outsourced Finance functions which are under significant cost pressure, to automate rules-driven processing tasks and to eliminate data re-keying across key interfaces.

Many organisations will have moved to new accounting systems, and will have addressed the question of whether or not to use cloud services for some or all of these systems, weighing up issues of cost and convenience, data security and inflexibility. For large complex organisations, the biggest factor in the move to new accounting systems will be all the work that has to take place on the interfaces from feeder systems. 

Perhaps one of the biggest recent changes has been in the use of data visualisation tools, which aim to make reports capture the attention of readers against a background of data overload and boredom with the more prosaic reports that are provided by ledgers and spreadsheets.

These data visualisation tools have a lot of powerful functionality, but of course are only as good as the availability and quality of the underlying data. These tools are often purchased direct by the business (for example, by the Sales function to report on forecasts). While these tools have their advantages, a challenge for the Finance function is to ensure a single version of the truth is accepted across the organisation.

The growing acceptance in the wider world of alternative versions of the truth, with the selective readiness to label truth as fake news, means that the Finance function needs to stay alert and retain control of what is and is not acceptable data for performance management across the organisation. While this does not merit the label of “transformation”, it is certainly an area where things have the potential to go badly wrong.  

Evolving to meet the needs of the enterprise

The label “Finance Transformation” has typically related to the vision, organisation and skills of Finance, and has then extended to processes, controls, data flows and systems. Today many organisations have implemented concepts such as shared service centres and remote business partners, along the lines of the Ulrich model which was devised back in 1995 for HR functions.

But a transformational new Finance structure will be never last for ever. Enterprises evolve both organically and through acquisitions and divestments. Where this evolution happens across multiple geographies and lines of business, the challenge for Finance can be transformational.

The evolution of the enterprise requires a constant re-tuning of the Finance model, for example in the coverage of the shared service centre, the alignment of business partners and the maintenance of specific technical expertise. It requires the roll-out of processes and systems into new parts of the enterprise, with all of the training and change management which comes with it.

A more unpredictable world

While the themes described above are all important, perhaps the biggest challenge for the CFO is how to steer the enterprise through a world that is far less predictable than it was considered to be twenty years ago. This unpredictability extends across politics, climate, consumer trends, the ability to protect data and intellectual capital, and many other key areas.

For a Finance function, accustomed to make predictions which will influence business decision making, the inherent unpredictability of the external world is naturally unsettling. Yet it would be unfortunate if the Finance function were to step back to being simply the bean counters of what has already taken place. The bean counting is necessary, but it is surely not sufficient.

How should Finance help the enterprise to respond to an unpredictable world? Scenario modelling and the clear articulation of assumptions are important, as are the ability to provide the earliest possible warning signals when assumptions and reality are diverging. There is no overall magic answer, but the worst thing is to pretend the problems caused by unpredictability are not there or will go away of their own accord.

Maintaining respect for proper financial judgement and control is critical too. In recent years we have witnessed the huge problems caused by overly aggressive profit taking and financial engineering. The outsourcing industry, in the UK and elsewhere, has been almost brought to its knees by a vicious spiral of high growth targets that led to decisions to contract for work at ultra-low margins, leading on to the fastest possible recognition of profits to meet the shareholder expectations that have been created, leading to zero room for movement when the contract faces delivery challenges, leading to write-offs and massive reductions in shareholder value.

Where the contract is in a critical area such as the provision of public services, the damage can extend way beyond the pain caused to shareholders.

This problem does not sit in the world of debits and credits. Nor is it really attributable to weaknesses in core Finance processes and data flows. Rather it is about Finance in its leadership and business partnering role, building trust and respect and a deep understanding of the business, and being robustly involved in decision making. In the context of the example above, “robust” should not mean agreeing that the delivery team can be given highly unrealistic future cost reduction targets which somehow make an early profit take acceptable. “Robust” rather means prudent financial analysis, control and the effective use of escalation paths where necessary.

But for many organisations this requires an ongoing investment in the skills and positioning of business partners and senior financial controllers, all of which costs money when resources are scarce. So the CFO will look at the ongoing optimisation of the end-to-end Finance function, taking advantage of the automation tools that are available, creating lean processes and eliminating waste.

This is driven not only for reasons of affordability, but also because Finance needs to be confident that it is doing the simple things right, in order to have both the bandwidth and the credibility to address the bigger challenges on its plate, rather than arguing on the back foot over whether a figure in a spreadsheet is correct.

In summary, Finance Transformation might well have been put to bed as a consulting service if business and the wider world had stood still. But the pace of change, the increasing level of unpredictability and the heightened pressures on business management all mean that Finance must keep on transforming itself to maintain relevance and to grasp the very significant challenges which both the enterprise and our wider society are so reliant on Finance to address.

Big Value in Little Data

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

As companies in many industries get increasingly good at managing and extracting value from Big Data, consumers need to stay alert if they are going to get a good deal.

A recent personal experience when renewing my family’s multi-car insurance policy (three cars, four drivers) brought this home to me.

Many of us who are consumers of insurance in the UK have learnt from experience that whenever we get an annual renewal reminder, with the lure of “Here is your premium for next year, we are giving you a great deal, if you are happy we will update your payments, saving you so much hassle…”, then the smart thing to do is to phone them back to complain that the new premium is unreasonably high.

Incidentally, the people I politely complain to are invariably charming, which reinforces my view that it’s all a big game. I actually now look forward to these annual calls.

In each of the last five years I have always ended up with a substantial reduction which is more than worth the hassle of making the call. There probably is a price I would accept to avoid the hassle, but I am waiting for my insurer to figure that out. After all, they are the ones who have the big data! But maybe they find that me and my friends are unusual, with most customers the bias towards “no hassle” is much greater.

The new realisation for me in the last two years has been that, when I make the call to see if they will give me a reduction in their quote, I am in danger of being in an unbalanced negotiation. The imbalance is in the amount of data at our fingertips. The insurer has loads of data on my premium history, but has chosen to reveal little of that to me.

To be specific, with a multi-car policy, the insurer will share with me the total premium I paid last year across all my cars, but not the premium per individual car. The individual amounts don’t appear in the policy documents. Thus when it comes to renewal, they give me verbal but not written information on their quotes per individual car, and then can easily bamboozle me with factors such as an increase in car thefts near my address which are impacting the quote – without of course sharing the algorithm.

Realising this, I have taken to keeping a scrap of paper where I write down the quotes for each individual car that they tell me over the phone. With now three years of this “Little Data”, I have found that I am suddenly in a much more effective negotiating position. I can now come back to the insurer with searching questions about proposed increases on each car individually, which generally produce the happy answer of “Ah yes sir, I see what you mean, let me find a way to make a further reduction in your quote”. David versus Goliath it might not quite be, but it has certainly persuaded me about the big value in Little Data.

Spot the difference – Robotic Process Automation and Digital Transformation

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I have noticed a number of conference invitations on the joint theme of Shared Services and Digital Transformation, and when you look at the agendas there is often a big emphasis on Robotic Process Automation (RPA). Are RPA and Digital Transformation one and the same, or are there some fundamental differences to be aware of?

RPA is certainly an important tool in the shared services armoury, and we are seeing increasing breadth both in use cases and in the scope of processes which are being automated. RPA is also proving its worth as a fast and cheap solution to back office systems integration challenges.

RPA is enabling the optimisation of key activities within the end-to-end flow of business processes, through the increasing automation of data capture, data enrichment, data validation, processing, reconciliation and analytics. Software Bots, which are created to undertake these activities, are becoming increasingly sophisticated. Once the initial investment in Bots has been paid off, there can be substantial cost reductions in ongoing operations, often accompanied by quality improvement in mundane task execution.

While RPA now covers an impressive breadth of processes, in many cases the business process which has been first cab off the RPA rank has been Accounts Payable. Shared Services historians will tell you that Accounts Payable was also one of the earliest processes to come within the remit of Shared Services.

But I do question whether this keen focus on process optimisation and cost saving really does equate to Digital Transformation.

Digital Transformation is surely a programme which takes place at the enterprise level, and reinvents the enterprise’s touch points, primarily with customers, and also with partners, suppliers and employees. Digital Transformation has the potential to disrupt and change markets, transforming not only customer experiences but also the whole fulfilment chain of creating, selling and delivering products and services. Digital Transformation harnesses technology enablers such as Big Data Analytics, Cloud, Internet of Things, and often stimulates the design of new Enterprise Architectures.  It is about technology, processes and data, but it is also much more than that – it is about people, organisation, culture and business vision.

If we take Finance and HR Shared Services, typically these consist of back office processes, at one or more remove from direct customer contact. They deliver key elements of an enterprise’s management processes, but they do not normally touch the sharp end of sales or product / service fulfilment. If we accept that Digital Transformation is primarily about reinventing the way that an enterprise sells and delivers products and services to its customers, then I struggle to see how the RPA of parts of say the Accounts Payable process or the Employee Training Course Booking process – worthy though they are – can claim to represent Digital Transformation.

This is not to say that Finance and HR do not have a vital role to play in enterprise Digital Transformation. But to play that role they need to look way beyond the automation of manual steps in their own back office processes.

Finance needs to think about how it can get the right data at the right time to people at the front line of the business, on an accessible device. The data needs to transcend organisational silos, while not compromising security, and it needs to be integrated, well analysed and easy to visualise. Where the fulfilment chain involves partners and suppliers, Finance should be getting together with them to reinvent end-to-end data flows. Finance also needs to help the business to create business cases for transformation and to measure the delivery of benefits, in rapidly changing and often experimental environments.

HR needs to champion the case for organisational and cultural change, recognising that enterprise Digital Transformation carries risk for the people charged with delivering it, and also for the people whose operational jobs and perhaps “empires” are impacted by it. HR needs to promote and enable new ways of working, and to reflect these both in the policies and procedures of the enterprise and also in the way that the enterprise presents itself to potential new “digital native” recruits.

Both Finance and HR also need to be able to lend high quality experts to the business, in support of enterprise Digital Transformation programmes, people who bring core Finance and HR skills and who also understand agility and the importance of customer experience. This is not to throw away the key corporate disciplines which protect shareholders and management, but to adapt them to ensure that they remain fit for purpose.

In conclusion, RPA within a Shared Service centre contributes to the effective and efficient running of the enterprise, and can also deliver cost savings which can then be reinvested in transforming the front of the business. However, RPA should not be seen as the same as Digital Transformation. If Finance and HR, the typical owners of Shared Services, wish to play an influential role in the Digital Transformation of the enterprise, then they need to look beyond the process maps of their own back office operations.